Several months before my thirteenth birthday, my mother
visited me in a dream and explained why she had sent me to live with
the circus seven years before. The dream was a Mitsubishi, I
believe, its style that of the Moonflower series of biochips, which
set the standard for pornography in those days; it had been
programmed to activate once my testosterone production reached a
certain level, and it featured a voluptuous Asian woman to whose
body my mother had apparently grafted the image of her own face. I
imagined she must have been in a desperate hurry and thus forced to
use whatever materials fell to hand; yet, taking into account the
Machiavellian intricacies of the family history, I later came to
think that her decision to alter a pornographic chip might be
intentional, designed to provoke Oedipal conflicts that would imbue
her message with a heightened urgency.
In the
dream, my mother told me that when I was eighteen I would come into
the trust created by my maternal grandfather, a fortune that would
make me the wealthiest man in Viet Nam. Were I to remain in her
care, she feared my father would eventually coerce me into assigning
control of the trust to him, whereupon he would have me killed.
Sending me to live with her old friend Vang Ky was the one means she
had of guaranteeing my safety. If all went as planned, I would have
several years to consider whether it was in my best interests to
claim the trust or to forswear it and continue my life in secure
anonymity. She had faith that Vang would educate me in a fashion
that would prepare me to arrive at the proper decision.
Needless to
say, I woke from the dream in tears. Vang had informed me not long
after my arrival at his door that my mother was dead, and that my
father was likely responsible for her death; but this fresh evidence
of his perfidy, and of her courage and sweetness, mingled though it
was with the confusions of intense eroticism, renewed my bitterness
and sharpened my sense of loss. I sat the rest of the night with
only the eerie music of tree frogs to distract me from despair,
which roiled about in my brain as if it were a species of sluggish
life both separate from and inimical to my own.
The next
morning, I sought out Vang and told him of the dream and asked what
I should do. He was sitting at the desk in the tiny cluttered
trailer that served as his home and office, going over the accounts:
a frail man in his late sixties with close-cropped gray hair,
dressed in a white open-collared shirt and green cotton trousers. He
had a long face–especially long from cheekbones to jaw–and an almost
feminine delicacy of feature, a combination of characteristics that
lent him a sly, witchy look; but though he was capable of slyness,
and though at times I suspected him of possessing supernatural
powers, at least as regards his ability to ferret out my misdeeds, I
perceived him at the time to be an inwardly directed soul who felt
misused by the world and whose only interests, apart from the
circus, were a love of books and calligraphy. He would occasionally
take a pipe of opium, but was otherwise devoid of vices, and it
strikes me now that while he had told me of his family and his
career in government (he said he still maintained those
connections), of a life replete with joys and passionate errors, he
was now in the process of putting all that behind him and
withdrawing from the world of the senses.
"You must
study the situation," he said, shifting in his chair, a movement
that shook the wall behind him, disturbing the leaflets stacked in
the cabinet above his head and causing one to sail down toward the
desk; he batted it away, and for an instant it floated in the air
before me, as if held by the hand of a spirit, a detailed pastel
rendering of a magnificent tent–a thousand times more magnificent
than the one in which we performed–and a hand-lettered legend
proclaiming the imminent arrival of the Radiant Green Star
Circus.
"You must
learn everything possible about your father and his associates," he
went on. "Thus you will uncover his weaknesses and define his
strengths. But first and foremost, you must continue to live. The
man you become will determine how best to use the knowledge you have
gained, and you mustn’t allow the pursuit of your studies to rise to
the level of obsession, or else his judgment will be clouded. Of
course, this is easier to do in theory than in practice. But if you
set about it in a measured way, you will succeed."
I asked how
I should go about seeking the necessary information, and he gestured
with his pen at another cabinet, one with a glass front containing
scrapbooks and bundles of computer paper; beneath it, a marmalade
cat was asleep atop a broken radio, which–along with framed
photographs of his wife, daughter, and grandson, all killed, he’d
told me, in an airline accident years before–rested on a chest of
drawers.
"Start
there," he said. "When you are done with those, my friends in the
government will provide us with your father’s financial records and
other materials."
I took a
cautious step toward the cabinet–stacks of magazines and newspapers
and file boxes made the floor of the trailer difficult to
negotiate–but Vang held up a hand to restrain me. "First," he said,
"you must live. We will put aside a few hours each day for you to
study, but before all else you are a member of my troupe. Do your
chores. Afterward we will sit down together and make a
schedule."
On the
desk, in addition to his computer, were a cup of coffee topped with
a mixture of sugar and egg, and a plastic dish bearing several
slices of melon. He offered me a slice and sat with his hands
steepled on his stomach, watching me eat. "Would you like time alone
to honor your mother?" he asked. "I suppose we can manage without
you for a morning."
"Not now,"
I told him. "Later, though . . ."
I finished
the melon, laid the rind on his plate, and turned to the door, but
he called me back.
"Philip,"
he said, "I cannot remedy the past, but I can assure you to a degree
as to the future. I have made you my heir. One day the circus will
be yours. Everything I own will be yours."
I peered at
him, not quite certain that he meant what he said, even though his
words had been plain.
"It may not
seem a grand gift," he said. "But perhaps you will discover that it
is more than it appears."
I thanked
him effusively, but he grimaced and waved me to silence–he was not
comfortable with displays of affection. Once again he told me to see
to my chores.
"Attend to
the major as soon as you’re able," he said. "He had a difficult
night. I know he would be grateful for your company."
Radiant
Green Star was not a circus in the tradition of the spectacular
traveling shows of the previous century. During my tenure, we never
had more than eight performers and only a handful of exhibits,
exotics that had been genetically altered in some fashion: a pair of
miniature tigers with hands instead of paws, a monkey with a
vocabulary of thirty-seven words, and the like. The entertainments
we presented were unsophisticated; we could not compete with those
available in Hanoi or Hue or Saigon, or, for that matter, those
accessible in the villages. But the villagers perceived us as a link
to a past they revered, and found in the crude charm of our
performances a sop to their nostalgia–it was as if we carried the
past with us, and we played to that illusion, keeping mainly to
rural places that appeared on the surface to be part of another
century. Even when the opportunity arose, Vang refused to play
anywhere near large population centers because–he said–of the
exorbitant bribes and licensing fees demanded by officials in such
areas. Thus for the first eighteen years of my life, I did not
venture into a city, and I came to know my country much as a tourist
might, driving ceaselessly through it, isolated within the troupe.
We traversed the north and central portions of Viet Nam in three
battered methane-powered trucks, one of which towed Vang’s trailer,
and erected our tents in pastures and school yards and soccer
fields, rarely staying anywhere longer than a few nights. On
occasion, to accommodate a private celebration sponsored by a
wealthy family, we would join forces with another troupe; but Vang
was reluctant to participate in such events, because being
surrounded by so many people caused our featured attraction to
become agitated, thus imperiling his fragile health.
Even today
the major remains a mystery to me. I have no idea if he was who he
claimed to be; nor, I think, did he know–his statements
concerning identity were usually vague and muddled, and the only
point about which he was firm was that he had been orphaned as a
young boy, raised by an uncle and aunt, and, being unmarried, was
the last of his line. Further, it’s unclear whether his claims were
the product of actual memory, delusion, or implantation. For the
benefit of our audiences, we let them stand as truth, and billed him
as Major Martin Boyette, the last surviving POW of the American War,
now well over a hundred years old and horribly disfigured, both
conditions the result of experiments in genetic manipulation by
means of viruses–this the opinion of a Hanoi physician who treated
the major during a bout of illness. Since such unregulated
experiments were performed with immoderate frequency throughout
Southeast Asia after the turn of the century, it was not an
unreasonable conclusion. Major Boyette himself had no recollection
of the process that had rendered him so monstrous and–if one were to
believe him–so long-lived.
We were
camped that day near the village of Cam Lo, and the tent where the
major was quartered had been set up at the edge of the jungle. He
liked the jungle, liked its noise and shadow, the sense of enclosure
it provided–he dreaded the prospect of being out in the open, so
much so that whenever we escorted him to the main tent, we would
walk with him, holding umbrellas to prevent him from seeing the sky
and to shield him from the sight of god and man. But once inside the
main tent, as if the formal structure of a performance neutralized
his aversion to space and scrutiny, he showed himself pridefully,
walking close to the bleachers, causing children to shy away and
women to cover their eyes. His skin hung from his flesh in
voluminous black folds (he was African-American), and when he raised
his arms, the folds beneath them spread like the wings of a bat; his
face, half-hidden by a layering of what appeared to be leather
shawls, was the sort of uncanny face one might see emerging from a
whorled pattern of bark, roughly human in form, yet animated by a
force that seems hotter than the human soul, less self-aware. Bits
of phosphorescence drifted in the darks of his eyes. His only
clothing was a ragged gray shift, and he hobbled along with the aid
of a staff cut from a sapling papaya–he might have been a prophet
escaped after a term in hell, charred and magical and full of doom.
But when he began to speak, relating stories from the American War,
stories of ill-fated Viet Cong heroes and the supernatural forces
whose aid they enlisted, all told in a deep rasping voice, his air
of suffering and menace evaporated, and his ugliness became an
intrinsic article of his power, as though he were a poet who had
sacrificed superficial glamour for the ability to express more
eloquently the beauty within. The audiences were won over, their
alarm transformed to delight, and they saluted him with enthusiastic
applause . . . but they never saw him as I did that morning: a
decrepit hulk given to senile maundering and moments of bright
terror when startled by a sound from outside the tent. Sitting in
his own filth, too weak or too uncaring to move.
When I
entered the tent, screwing up my face against the stench, he tucked
his head into his shoulder and tried to shroud himself in the fetid
folds of his skin. I talked softly, gentling him as I might a
frightened animal, in order to persuade him to stand. Once he had
heaved up to his feet, I bathed him, sloshing buckets of water over
his convulsed surfaces; when at length I was satisfied that I’d done
my best, I hauled in freshly cut boughs and made him a clean place
to sit. Unsteadily, he lowered himself onto the boughs and started
to eat from the bowl of rice and vegetables I had brought for his
breakfast, using his fingers to mold bits of food into a ball and
inserting it deep into his mouth–he often had difficulty
swallowing.
"Is it
good?" I asked. He made a growly noise of affirmation. In the
half-dark, I could see the odd points of brilliance in his
eyes.
I hated
taking care of the major (this may have been the reason Vang put me
in charge of him). His physical state repelled me, and though the
American War had long since ceased to be a burning issue, I resented
his purported historical reality–being half American, half
Vietnamese, I felt doubly afflicted by the era he represented. But
that morning, perhaps because my mother’s message had inoculated me
against my usual prejudices, he fascinated me. It was like watching
a mythological creature feed, a chimera or a manticore, and I
thought I perceived in him the soul of the inspired storyteller, the
luminous half-inch of being that still burned behind the corroded
ruin of his face.
"Do you
know who I am?" I asked.
He
swallowed and gazed at me with those haunted foxfire eyes. I
repeated the question.
"Philip,"
he said tonelessly, giving equal value to both syllables, as if the
name were a word he’d been taught but did not understand.
I wondered
if he was–as Vang surmised–an ordinary man transformed into a
monster, pumped full of glorious tales and false memories, all as a
punishment for some unguessable crime or merely on a cruel whim. Or
might he actually be who he claimed? A freak of history, a
messenger from another time whose stories contained some core truth,
just as the biochip had contained my mother’s truth? All I knew for
certain was that Vang had bought him from another circus, and that
his previous owner had found him living in the jungle in the
province of Quan Tri, kept alive by the charity of people from a
nearby village who considered him the manifestation of a
spirit.
Once he had
finished his rice, I asked him to tell me about the war, and he
launched into one of his mystical tales; but I stopped him, saying,
"Tell me about the real war. The war you fought in."
He fell
silent, and when at last he spoke, it was not in the resonant tones
with which he entertained our audiences, but in an effortful
whisper.
"We came to
the firebase in . . . company strength. Tenth of May. Nineteen
sixty-seven. The engineers had just finished construction and . . .
and . . . there was still . . ." He paused to catch his breath. "The
base was near the Laotian border. Overlooking a defoliated rubber
plantation. Nothing but bare red earth in front of us . . . and
wire. But at our rear . . . the jungle . . . it was too close. They
brought in artillery to clear it. Lowered the batteries to full
declension. The trees all toppled in the same direction . . . as if
they’d been pushed down by the sweep . . . of an invisible
hand."
His
delivery, though still labored, grew less halting, and he made
feeble gestures to illustrate the tale, movements that produced a
faint slithering as folds of his skin rubbed together; the
flickerings in his pupils grew more and more pronounced, and I
half-believed his eyes were openings onto a battlefield at night, a
place removed from us by miles and time.
"Because of
the red dirt, the base was designated Firebase Ruby. But the dirt
wasn’t the color of rubies, it was the red of drying blood. For
months we held the position with only token resistance. We’d
expected serious opposition, and it was strange to sit there day
after day with nothing to do except send out routine patrols. I
tried to maintain discipline, but it was an impossible task.
Everyone malingered. Drug use was rampant. If I’d gone by the book I
could have brought charges against every man on the base. But what
was the point? War was not truly being waged. We were engaged in a
holding action. Policy was either directionless or misguided. And so
I satisfied myself by maintaining a semblance of discipline as the
summer heat and the monsoon melted away the men’s
resolve.
"October
came, the rains slackened. There was no hint of increased enemy
activity, but I had a feeling something big was on the horizon. I
spoke to my battalion commander. He felt the same way. I was told we
had intelligence suggesting that the enemy planned a fall and winter
campaign building up to Tet. But no one took it seriously. I don’t
think I took it seriously myself. I was a professional soldier who’d
been sitting idle for six months, and I was spoiling for a fight. I
was so eager for engagement I failed to exercise good judgment. I
ignored the signs, I . . . I refused . . . I . . ."
He broke
off and pawed at something above him in the air–an apparition,
perhaps; then he let out an anguished cry, covered his face with his
hands, and began to shake like a man wracked by fever.
I sat with
him until, exhausted, he lapsed into a fugue, staring dully at the
ground. He was so perfectly still, if I had come across him in the
jungle, I might have mistaken him for a root system that had assumed
a hideous anthropomorphic shape. Only the glutinous surge of his
breath opposed this impression. I didn’t know what to think of his
story. The plain style of its narration had been markedly different
from that of his usual stories, and this lent it credibility; yet I
recalled that whenever questioned about his identity, he would
respond in a similar fashion. However, the ambiguous character of
his personal tragedy did not diminish my new fascination with his
mystery. It was as if I had been dusting a vase that rested on my
mantelpiece, and, for the first time, I’d turned it over to inspect
the bottom and found incised there a labyrinthine design, one that
drew my eye inward along its black circuit, promising that should I
be able to decipher the hidden character at its center, I would be
granted a glimpse of something ultimately bleak and at the same time
ultimately alluring. Not a secret, but rather the source of secrets.
Not truth, but the ground upon which truth and its opposite were
raised. I was a mere child–half a child, at any rate–thus I have no
real understanding of how I arrived at this recognition, illusory
though it may have been. But I can state with absolute surety why it
seemed important at the time: I had a powerful sense of connection
with the major, and, accompanying this, the presentiment that his
mystery was somehow resonant with my own.
Except for
my new program of study, researching my father’s activities, and the
enlarged parameters of my relationship with Major Boyette, whom I
visited whenever I had the opportunity, over the next several years
my days were much the same as ever, occupied by touring, performing
(I functioned as a clown and an apprentice knife thrower), by all
the tediums and pleasures that arose from life in Radiant Green
Star. There were, of course, other changes. Vang grew increasingly
frail and withdrawn, the major’s psychological state deteriorated,
and four members of the troupe left and were replaced. We gained two
new acrobats, Kim and Kai, pretty Korean sisters aged seven and ten
respectively–orphans trained by another circus–and Tranh, a
middle-aged, moonfaced man whose potbelly did not hamper in the
slightest his energetic tumbling and pratfalls. But to my mind, the
most notable of the replacements was Vang’s niece, Tan, a slim,
quiet girl from Hue with whom I immediately fell in love.
Tan was
nearly seventeen when she joined us, a year older than I, an age
difference that seemed unbridgeable to my teenage sensibilities. Her
shining black hair hung to her waist, her skin was the color of
sandalwood dusted with gold, and her face was a perfect cameo in
which the demure and the sensual commingled. Her father had been in
failing health, and both he and his wife had been uploaded into a
virtual community hosted by the Sony AI–Tan had then become her
uncle’s ward. She had no actual performing skills, but dressed in
glittery revealing costumes, she danced and took part in comic skits
and served as one of the targets for our knife thrower, a taciturn
young man named Dat who was billed as James Bond Cochise. Dat’s
other target, Mei, a chunky girl of Taiwanese extraction who also
served as the troupe’s physician, having some knowledge of herbal
medicine, would come prancing out and stand at the board, and Dat
would plant his knives within a centimeter of her flesh; but when
Tan took her place, he would exercise extreme caution and set the
knives no closer than seven or eight inches away, a contrast that
amused our audiences no end.
For months
after her arrival, I hardly spoke to Tan, and then only for some
utilitarian purpose; I was too shy to manage a normal conversation.
I wished with all my heart that I was eighteen and a man, with the
manly confidence that, I assumed, naturally flowed from having
attained the age. As things stood I was condemned by my utter lack
of self-confidence to admire her from afar, to imagine conversations
and other intimacies, to burn with all the frustration of unrequited
lust. But then, one afternoon, while I sat in the grass outside
Vang’s trailer, poring over some papers dealing with my father’s
investments, she approached, wearing loose black trousers and a
white blouse, and asked what I was doing.
"I see you
reading every day," she said. "You are so dedicated to your studies.
Are you preparing for the university?"
We had set
up our tents outside Bien Pho, a village some sixty miles south of
Hanoi, on the grassy bank of a wide, meandering river whose water
showed black beneath a pewter sky. Dark green conical hills with
rocky outcroppings hemmed in the spot, and it was shaded here and
there by smallish trees with crooked trunks and puffs of foliage at
the ends of their corkscrew branches. The main tent had been erected
at the base of the nearest hill and displayed atop it a pennant
bearing the starry emblem of our troupe. Everyone else was inside,
getting ready for the night’s performance. It was a brooding yet
tranquil scene, like a painting on an ancient Chinese scroll, but I
noticed none of it–the world had shrunk to the bubble of grass and
air that enclosed the two of us.
Tan sat
beside me, crossed her legs in a half-lotus, and I caught her scent.
Not perfume, but the natural musky yield of her flesh. I did my best
to explain the purpose of my studies, the words rushing out as if I
were unburdening myself of an awful secret. Which was more-or-less
the case. No one apart from Vang knew what I was doing, and because
his position relative to the task was tutelary, not that of a
confidante, I felt oppressed, isolated by the responsibility I bore.
Now it seemed that by disclosing the sad facts bracketing my life, I
was acting to reduce their power over me. And so, hoping to exorcise
them completely, I told her about my father.
"His name
is William Ferrance," I said, hastening to add that I’d taken Ky for
my own surname. "His father emigrated to Asia in the Nineties,
during the onset of doi moi (this the Vietnamese equivalent
of perestroika), and made a fortune in Saigon, adapting
fleets of taxis to methane power. His son–my father–expanded the
family interests. He invested in a number of construction projects,
all of which lost money. He was in trouble financially when he
married my mother, and he used her money to fund a casino in Danang.
That allowed him to recoup most of his losses. Since then, he’s
established connections with the triads, Malaysian gambling
syndicates, and the Bamboo Union in Taiwan. He’s become an
influential man, but his money’s tied up. He has no room to
maneuver. Should he gain control of my grandfather’s estate, he’ll
be a very dangerous man."
"But this
is so impersonal," Tan said. "Have you no memories of
him?"
"Hazy
ones," I said. "From all I can gather, he never took much interest
in me . . . except as a potential tool. The truth is, I can scarcely
remember my mother. Just the occasional moment. How she looked
standing at a window. The sound of her voice when she sang. And I
have a general impression of the person she was. Nothing
more."
Tan looked
off toward the river; some of the village children were chasing each
other along the bank, and a cargo boat with a yellow sail was coming
into view around the bend. "I wonder," she said. "Is it worse to
remember those who’ve gone, or not to remember them?"
I guessed
she was thinking about her parents, and I wanted to say something
helpful, but the concept of uploading an intelligence, a
personality, was so foreign to me, I was afraid of appearing
foolish.
"I can see
my mother and father whenever I want," Tan said, lowering her gaze
to the grass. "I can go to a Sony office anywhere in the world and
summon them with a code. When they appear they look like themselves,
they sound like themselves, but I know it’s not them. The things
they say are always . . . appropriate. But something is missing.
Some energy, some quality." She glanced up at me, and, looking into
her beautiful dark eyes, I felt giddy, almost weightless. "Something
dies," she went on. "I know it! We’re not just electrical impulses,
we can’t be sucked up into a machine and live. Something dies,
something important. What goes into the machine is nothing. It’s
only a colored shadow of what we are."
"I don’t
have much experience with computers," I said.
"But you’ve
experienced life!" She touched the back of my hand. "Can’t you feel
it within you? I don’t know what to call it . . . a soul? I don’t
know. . . ."
It seemed
then I could feel the presence of the thing she spoke of moving in
my chest, my blood, going all through me, attached to my mind, my
flesh, by an unfathomable connection, existing inside me the way
breath exists inside a flute, breeding the brief, pretty life of a
note, a unique tone, and then passing on into the ocean of the air.
Whenever I think of Tan, how she looked that morning, I’m able to
feel that delicate, tremulous thing, both temporary and eternal,
hovering in the same space I occupy.
"This is
too serious," she said. "I’m sorry. I’ve been thinking about my
parents more than I should." She shook back the fall of her hair,
put on a smile. "Do you play chess?"
"No," I
admitted.
"You must
learn! A knowledge of the game will help if you intend to wage war
against your father." A regretful expression crossed her face, as if
she thought she’d spoken out of turn. "Even if you don’t . . . I
mean . . ." Flustered, she waved her hands to dispel the awkwardness
of the moment. "It’s fun," she said. "I’ll teach you."
I did not
make a good chess player, I was far too distracted by the presence
of my teacher to heed her lessons. But I’m grateful to the game, for
through the movements of knights and queens, through my clumsiness
and her patience, through hours of sitting with our heads bent close
together, our hearts grew close. We were never merely friends–from
that initial conversation on, it was apparent that we would someday
take the next step in exploring our relationship, and I rarely felt
any anxiety in this regard; I knew that when Tan was ready, she
would tell me. For the time being, we enjoyed a kind of amplified
friendship, spending our leisure moments together, our physical
contact limited to hand-holding and kisses on the cheek. This is not
to say that I always succeeded in conforming to those limits. Once
as we lay atop Vang’s trailer, watching the stars, I was overcome by
her scent, the warmth of her shoulder against mine, and I propped
myself up on an elbow and kissed her on the mouth. She responded,
and I stealthily unbuttoned her blouse, exposing her breasts. Before
I could proceed further, she sat bolt upright, holding her blouse
closed, and gave me a injured look; then she slid down from the
trailer and walked off into the dark, leaving me in a state of
dismay and painful arousal. I slept little that night, worried that
I had done permanent damage to the relationship; but the next day
she acted as if nothing had happened, and we went on as before,
except that I now wanted her more than ever.
Vang,
however, was not so forgiving. How he knew I had taken liberties
with his niece, I’m not sure–it may have been simply an incidence of
his intuitive abilities; I cannot imagine that Tan told him.
Whatever his sources, after our performance the next night he came
into the main tent where I was practicing with my knives, hurling
them into a sheet of plywood upon which the red outline of a human
figure had been painted, and asked if my respect for him had
dwindled to the point that I would dishonor his sister’s
daughter.
He was
sitting in the first row of the bleachers, leaning back, resting his
elbows on the row behind him, gazing at me with distaste. I was
infuriated by this casual indictment, and rather than answer
immediately I threw another knife, placing it between the outline’s
arm and its waist. I walked to the board, yanked the blade free, and
said without turning to him, "I haven’t dishonored her."
"But surely
that is your intent," he said.
Unable to
contain my anger, I spun about to face him. "Were you never young?
Have you never been in love?"
"Love." He
let out a dry chuckle. "If you are in love, perhaps you would care
to enlighten me as to its nature."
I would
have liked to tell him how I felt about Tan, to explain the sense of
security I found with her, the varieties of tenderness, the niceties
of my concern for her, the thousand nuances of longing, the
intricate complicity of our two hearts and the complex specificity
of my desire, for though I wanted to lose myself in the turns of her
body, I also wanted to celebrate her, enliven her, to draw out of
her the sadness that sometimes weighed her down, and to have her
leach my sadness from me as well–I knew this was possible for us.
But I was too young and too angry to articulate these
things.
"Do you
love your mother?" Vang asked, and before I could respond, he said,
"You have admitted that you have but a few disjointed memories of
her. And, of course, a dream. Yet you have chosen to devote yourself
to pursuing the dictates of that dream, to making a life that honors
your mother’s wishes. That is love. How can you compare this to your
infatuation with Tan?"
Frustrated,
I cast my eyes up to the billow of patched gray canvas overhead, to
the metal rings at the peak from which Kai and Kim were nightly
suspended. When I looked back to Vang, I saw that he had gotten to
his feet.
"Think on
it," he said. "If the time comes when you can regard Tan with the
same devotion, well . . ." He made a subtle dismissive gesture with
his fingers that suggested this was an unlikely prospect.
I turned to
the board and hefted another knife. The target suddenly appeared
evil in its anonymity, a dangerous creature with a wood-grain face
and blood-red skin, and as I drew back my arm, my anger at Vang
merged with the greater anger I felt at the anonymous forces that
had shaped my life, and I buried the knife dead center of the
head–it took all my strength to work the blade free. Glancing up, I
was surprised to see Vang watching from the entrance. I had assumed
that, having spoken his piece, he had returned to his trailer. He
stood there for a few seconds, giving no overt sign of his mood, but
I had the impression he was pleased.
When she
had no other duties, Tan would assist me with my chores: feeding the
exotics, cleaning out their cages, and, though she did not relish
his company, helping me care for the major. I must confess I was
coming to enjoy my visits with him less and less; I still felt a
connection to him, and I remained curious as to the particulars of
his past, but his mental slippage had grown so pronounced, it was
difficult to be around him. Frequently he insisted on trying to
relate the story of Firebase Ruby, but he always lapsed into terror
and grief at the same point he had previously broken off the
narrative. It seemed that this was a tale he was making up, not one
he had been taught or programmed to tell, and that his mind was no
longer capable of other than fragmentary invention. But one
afternoon, as we were finishing up in his tent, he began to tell the
story again, this time starting at the place where he had previously
faltered, speaking without hesitancy in the deep, raspy voice he
used while performing.
"It came to
be October," he said. "The rains slackened, the snakes kept to their
holes during the day, and the spiderwebs were not so thick with
victims as they’d been during the monsoon. I began to have a feeling
that something ominous was on the horizon, and when I communicated
this sense of things to my superiors, I was told that according to
intelligence, an intensification of enemy activity was expected,
leading up to what was presumed to be a major offensive during the
celebration of Tet. But I gave no real weight to either my feeling
or to the intelligence reports. I was a professional soldier, and
for six months I’d been engaged in nothing more than sitting in a
bunker and surveying a wasteland of red dirt and razor wire. I was
spoiling for a fight."
He was
sitting on a nest of palm fronds, drenched in a spill of buttery
light–we had partially unzipped the roof of the tent in order to
increase ventilation–and it looked as if the fronds were an island
adrift in a dark void and he a spiritual being who had been scorched
and twisted by some cosmic fire, marooned in eternal
emptiness.
"The
evening of the Fourteenth, I sent out the usual patrols and retired
to my bunker. I sat at my desk reading a paperback novel and
drinking whiskey. After a time, I put down the book and began a
letter to my wife. I was tipsy, and instead of the usual sentimental
lines designed to make her feel secure, I let my feelings pour onto
the paper, writing about the lack of discipline, my fears concerning
the enemy, my disgust at the way the war was being prosecuted. I
told her how much I hated Viet Nam. The ubiquitous corruption, the
stupidity of the South Vietnamese government. The smell of fish
sauce, the poisonous greens of the jungle. Everything. The goddamn
place had been a battlefield so long, it was good for nothing else.
I kept drinking, and the liquor eroded my remaining inhibitions. I
told her about the treachery and ineptitude of the ARVN forces,
about the fuck-ups on our side who called themselves
generals."
"I was
still writing when, around twenty-one hundred hours, something
distracted me. I’m not sure what it was. A noise . . . or maybe a
vibration. But I knew something had happened. I stepped out into the
corridor and heard a cry. Then the crackling of small arms fire. I
grabbed my rifle and ran outside. The VC were inside the wire. In
the perimeter lights I saw dozens of diminutive men and women in
black pajamas scurrying about, white stars sputtering from the
muzzles of their weapons. I cut down several of them. I couldn’t
think how they had gotten through the wire and the minefields
without alerting the sentries, but then, as I continued to fire, I
spotted a man’s head pop up out of the ground and realized that they
had tunneled in. All that slow uneventful summer, they’d been busy
beneath the surface of the earth, secretive as termites."
At this
juncture the major fell prey once again to emotional collapse, and I
prepared myself for the arduous process of helping him recover; but
Tan kneeled beside him, took his hand, and said, "Martin? Martin,
listen to me."
No one ever
used the major’s Christian name, except to introduce him to an
audience, and I didn’t doubt that it had been a long time since a
woman had addressed him with tenderness. He abruptly stopped his
shaking, as if the nerves that had betrayed him had been severed,
and stared wonderingly at Tan. White pinprick suns flickered and
died in the deep places behind his eyes.
"Where are
you from, Martin?" she asked, and the major, in a dazed tone,
replied, "Oakland . . . Oakland, California. But I was born up in
Santa Cruz."
"Santa
Cruz." Tan gave the name a bell-like reading. "Is it beautiful in
Santa Cruz? It sounds like a beautiful place."
"Yeah . . .
it’s kinda pretty. There’s old-growth redwoods not far from town.
And there’s the ocean. It’s real pretty along the ocean."
To my
amazement, Tan and the major began to carry on a coherent–albeit
simplistic–conversation, and I realized that he had never spoken in
this fashion before. His syntax had an uncustomary informality, and
his voice held the trace of an accent. I thought that Tan’s gentle
approach must have penetrated his tormented psyche, either reaching
the submerged individual, the real Martin Boyette, or else
encountering a fresh layer of delusion. It was curious to hear him
talk about such commonplace subjects as foggy weather and jazz music
and Mexican food, all of which he claimed could be found in good
supply in Santa Cruz. Though his usual nervous tics were in
evidence, a new placidity showed in his face. But, of course this
state of affairs didn’t last.
"I can’t,"
he said, taking a sudden turn from the subject at hand; he shook his
head, dragging folds of skin across his neck and shoulders, "I can’t
go back anymore. I can’t go back there."
"Don’t be
upset, Martin," Tan said. "There’s no reason for you to worry. We’ll
stay with you, we’ll . . ."
"I don’t
want you to stay." He tucked his head into his shoulder so his face
was hidden by a bulge of skin. "I got to get back doin’ what I was
doin’."
"What’s
that?" I asked him. "What were you doing?"
A muffled
rhythmic grunting issued from his throat–laughter that went on too
long to be an expression of simple mirth. It swelled in volume,
trebled in pitch, becoming a signature of instability.
"I’m
figurin’ it all out," he said. "That’s what I’m doin’. Jus’ you go
away now."
"Figuring
out what?" I asked, intrigued by the possibility–however
unlikely–that the major might have a mental life other than the
chaotic, that his apparent incoherence was merely an incidental
byproduct of concentration, like the smoke that rises from a leaf
upon which a beam of sunlight has been focused.
He made no
reply, and Tan touched my hand, signaling that we should leave. As I
ducked through the tent flap, behind me the major said, "I can’t go
back there, and I can’t be here. So jus’ where’s that leave me,
y’know?"
Exactly
what the major meant by this cryptic statement was unclear, but his
words stirred something in me, reawakened me to internal conflicts
that had been pushed aside by my studies and my involvement with
Tan. When I had arrived to take up residence at Green Star, I was in
a state of emotional upheaval, frightened, confused, longing for my
mother. Yet even after I calmed down, I was troubled by the feeling
that I had lost my place in the world, and it seemed this was not
just a consequence of having been uprooted from my family, but that
I had always felt this way, that the turbulence of my emotions had
been a cloud obscuring what was a constant strain in my life. This
was due in part to my mixed heritage. Though the taint associated
with the children of Vietnamese mothers and American fathers (dust
children, they had once been called) had dissipated since the end of
the war, it had not done so entirely, and wherever the circus
traveled. I would encounter people who, upon noticing the lightness
of my skin and the shape of my eyes, expressed scorn and kept their
distance. Further fueling this apprehension was the paucity of my
memories deriving from the years before I had come to live with
Vang. Whenever Tan spoke about her childhood, she brought up
friends, birthdays, uncles and cousins, trips to Saigon, dances,
hundreds of details and incidents that caused my own memory to
appear grossly underpopulated by comparison. Trauma was to blame, I
reckoned. The shock of my mother’s abandonment, however
well-intended, had ripped open my mental storehouse and scattered
the contents. That and the fact that I had been six when I left home
and thus hadn’t had time to accumulate the sort of cohesive memories
that lent color to Tan’s stories of Hue. But explaining it away did
not lessen my discomfort, and I became fixated on the belief that no
matter the nature of the freakish lightning that had sheared away my
past, I would never find a cure for the sense of dislocation it had
provoked, only medicines that would suppress the symptoms and mask
the disease–and, that being so masked, it would grow stronger,
immune to treatment, until eventually I would be possessed by it,
incapable of feeling at home anywhere.
I had no
remedy for these anxieties other than to throw myself with greater
intensity into my studies, and with this increase in intensity came
a concomitant increase in anger. I would sit at Vang’s computer,
gazing at photographs of my father, imagining violent resolutions to
our story. I doubted that he would recognize me; I favored my mother
and bore little resemblance to him, a genetic blessing for which I
was grateful: he was not particularly handsome, though he was
imposing, standing nearly six and a half feet tall and
weighing–according to a recent medical report–two hundred and
sixty-four pounds, giving the impression not of a fat man, but a
massive one. His large squarish head was kept shaved, and on his
left cheek was the dark blue and green tattoo of his corporate
emblem–a flying fish–ringed by three smaller tattoos denoting
various of his business associations. At the base of his skull was
an oblong silver plate beneath which lay a number of ports allowing
him direct access to a computer. Whenever he posed for a picture, he
affected what I assumed he would consider a look of hauteur, but the
smallness of his eyes (grayish blue) and nose and mouth in contrast
to the largeness of his face caused them to be limited in their
capacity to convey character and emotional temperature, rather like
the features on a distant planet seen through a telescope, and as a
result this particular expression came across as prim. In less
formal photographs, taken in the company of one or another of his
sexual partners, predominantly women, he was quite obviously
intoxicated.
He owned an
old French Colonial in Saigon, but spent the bulk of his time at his
house in Binh Khoi, one of the flower towns–communities built at the
turn of the century, intended to provide privacy and comfort for
well-to-do Vietnamese whose sexual preferences did not conform to
communist morality. Now that communism–if not the concept of sexual
morality itself–had become quaint, a colorful patch of history
dressed up with theme-park neatness to amuse the tourists, it would
seem that these communities no longer had any reason to exist; yet
exist they did. Their citizenry had come to comprise a kind of gay
aristocracy that defined styles, set trends, and wielded significant
political power. Though they maintained a rigid exclusivity, and
though my father’s bisexuality was motivated to a great degree–I
believe–by concerns of business and status, he had managed to cajole
and bribe his way into Binh Khoi, and as best I could determine, he
was sincere in his attachment to the place.
The
pictures taken at Binh Khoi rankled me the most–I hated to see him
laughing and smiling. I would stare at those photographs, my
emotions overheating, until it seemed I could focus rage into a beam
and destroy any object upon which I turned my gaze. My eventual
decision, I thought, would be easy to make. Anger and history, the
history of his violence and greed, were making it for me, building a
spiritual momentum impossible to stop. When the time came, I would
avenge my mother and claim my inheritance. I knew exactly how to go
about the task. My father feared no one less powerful than
himself–if such a person moved against him, they would be the target
of terrible reprisals–and he recognized the futility of trying to
fend off an assassination attempt by anyone more powerful; thus his
security was good, yet not impenetrable. The uniqueness of my
situation lay in the fact that if I were able to kill him, I would
as a consequence become more powerful than he or any of his
connections; and so, without the least hesitancy, I began to plan
his murder both in Binh Khoi and Saigon–I had schematics detailing
the security systems of both homes. But in the midst of crafting the
means of his death, I lost track of events that were in the process
of altering the conditions attendant upon my decision.
One night
not long after my seventeenth birthday, I was working at the
computer in the trailer, when Vang entered and lowered himself
carefully in the chair opposite me, first shooing away the marmalade
cat who had been sleeping there. He wore a threadbare gray cardigan
and the striped trousers from an old suit, and carried a thin folder
bound in plastic. I was preoccupied with tracking my father’s
movements via his banking records and I acknowledged Vang’s presence
with a nod. He sat without speaking a while and finally said,
"Forgive my intrusion, but would you be so kind as to allow me a
minute of your time."
I realized
he was angry, but my own anger took precedence. It was not just that
I was furious with my father; I had grown weary of Vang’s distant
manner, his goading, his incessant demands for respect in face of
his lack of respect for me. "What do you want?" I asked without
looking away from the screen.
He tossed
the folder onto the desk. "Your task has become more
problematic."
The folder
contained the personnel file of a attractive woman named Phuong Anh
Nguyen whom my father had hired as a bodyguard. Much of the data
concerned her considerable expertise with weapons and her reaction
times, which were remarkable–it was apparent that she had been bred
for her occupation, genetically enhanced. According to the file her
senses were so acute, she could detect shifts in the heat patterns
of the brain, subtle changes in blood pressure, heart rate,
pupillary dilation, speech, all the telltales that would betray the
presence of a potential assassin. The information concerning her
personal life was skimpy. Though Vietnamese, she had been born in
China, and had spent her life until the age of sixteen behind the
walls of a private security agency, where she had received her
training. Serving a variety of employers, she had killed sixteen men
and women over the next five years. Several months before, she had
bought out her contract from the security agency and signed on
long-term with my father. Like him, she was bisexual, and, also like
him, the majority of her partners were women.
I glanced
up from the file to find Vang studying me with an expectant air.
"Well," he said, "what do you think?"
"She’s not
bad-looking," I said.He folded
his arms, made a disgusted noise.
"All
right." I turned the pages of the file. "My father’s upgrading his
security. That means he’s looking ahead to bigger things. Preparing
for the day when he can claim my trust."
"Is that
all you’re able to extract from the document?"
From
outside came voices, laughter. They passed, faded. Mei, I thought,
and Tranh. It was a cool night, the air heavy with the scent of
rain. The door was cracked open, and I could see darkness and thin
streamers of fog. "What else is there?" I asked.
"Use your
mind, won’t you?" Vang let his head tip forward and closed his
eyes–a formal notice of his exasperation. "Phuong would require a
vast sum in order to pay off her contract. Several million, at
least. Her wage is a good one, but even if she lived in poverty,
which she does not, it would take her a decade or more to save
sufficient funds. Where might she obtain such a sum?"
I had no
idea.
"From her
new employer, of course," Vang said.
"My father
doesn’t have that kind of money lying around."
"It seems
he does. Only a very wealthy man could afford such a servant as
Phuong Anh Nguyen."
I took
mental stock of my father’s finances, but was unable to recall an
excess of cash.
"It’s safe
to say the money did not come from your father’s business
enterprises," said Vang. "We have good information on them. So we
may assume he either stole it or coerced someone else into stealing
it." The cat jumped up into his lap, began kneading his abdomen.
"Rather than taxing your brain further," he went on, "I’ll tell you
what I believe has happened. He’s tapped into your trust. It’s much
too large to be managed by one individual, and it’s quite possible
he’s succeeded in corrupting one of the officers in
charge."
"You can’t
be sure of that."
"No, but I
intend to contact my government friends and suggest an investigation
of the trust. If your father has done what I suspect, it will
prevent him from doing more damage." The cat had settled on his lap;
he stroked its head. "But the trust is not the problem. Even if your
father has stolen from it, he can’t have taken much more than was
necessary to secure this woman’s services. Otherwise the man who
gave me this"–he gestured at the folder–"would have detected
evidence of other expenditures. There’ll be more than enough left to
make you a powerful man. Phuong Anh Nguyen is the problem. You’ll
have to kill her first."
The loopy
cry of a night bird cut the silence. Someone with a flashlight was
crossing the pasture where the trailer rested, the beam of light
slicing through layers of fog, sweeping over shrubs and patches of
grass. I suggested that one woman shouldn’t pose that much of a
problem, no matter how efficient she was at violence.
Vang closed
his eyes again. "You have not witnessed this kind of professional in
action. They’re fearless, totally dedicated to their work. They
develop a sixth sense concerning their clients; they bond with them.
You’ll need to be circumspect in dealing with her."
"Perhaps
she’s beyond my capacity to deal with," I said after a pause.
"Perhaps I’m simply too thickheaded. I should probably let it all go
and devote myself to Green Star."
"Do as you
see fit."
Vang’s
expression did not shift from its stoic cast, but it appeared to
harden, and I could tell that he was startled. I instructed the
computer to sleep and leaned back, bracing one foot against the side
of the desk. "There’s no need for pretense," I said. "I know you
want me to kill him. I just don’t understand why."
I waited
for him to respond, and when he did not, I said, "You were my
mother’s friend–that’s reason enough to wish him dead, I suppose.
But I’ve never felt that you were my friend. You’ve given me
. . . everything. Life. A place to live. A purpose. Yet whenever I
try to thank you, you dismiss it out of hand. I used to think this
was because you were shy, because you were embarrassed by displays
of emotion. Now, I’m not sure. Sometimes it seems you find my
gratitude repugnant . . . or embarrassing in a way that has nothing
to do with shyness. It’s as if"–I struggled to collect my thoughts
"–as if you have some reason for hating my father that you haven’t
told me. One you’re ashamed to admit. Or maybe it’s something else,
some piece of information you have that gives you a different
perspective on the situation."
Being
honest with him was both exhilarating and frightening–I felt as
though I were violating a taboo–and after this speech I was left
breathless and disoriented, unsure of everything I’d said, though
I’d been thoroughly convinced of its truth when I said it. "I’m
sorry," I told him. "I’ve no right to doubt you."
He started
to make a gesture of dismissal such as was his habit when
uncomfortable with a conversation, but caught himself and petted the
cat instead. "Despite the differences in our stations, I was very
close to your mother," he said. "And to your grandfather. No longer
having a family of my own, I made them into a surrogate. When they
died, one after the other . . . you see, your grandfather’s
presence, his wealth, protected your mother, and once he was gone,
your father had no qualms against misusing her." He blew out a
breath, like a horse, through his lips. "When they died, I lost my
heart. I’d lost so much already, I was unable to bear the sorrow I
felt. I retreated from the world, I rejected my emotions. In effect,
I shut myself down." He put a hand to his forehead, covering his
eyes. I could see he was upset, and I felt badly that I had caused
these old griefs to wound him again. "I know you have suffered as a
result," he went on. "You’ve grown up without the affection of a
parent, and that is a cruel condition. I wish I could change that. I
wish I could change the way I am, but the idea of risking myself, of
having everything ripped away from me a third time . . . it’s
unbearable." His hand began to tremble; he clenched it into a fist,
pressed it against the bridge of his nose. "It is I who should
apologize to you. Please, forgive me."
I assured
him that he need not ask for forgiveness, I honored and respected
him. I had the urge to tell him I loved him, and at that moment I
did–I believed now that in loving my family, in carrying out my
mother’s wishes, he had established his love for me. Hoping to
distract him from his grief, I asked him to tell me about my
grandfather, a man concerning whom I knew next to nothing, only that
he had been remarkably successful in business.
Vang seemed
startled by the question, but after taking a second to compose
himself, he said, "I’m not sure you would have approved of him. He
was a strong man, and strong men often sacrifice much that ordinary
men hold dear in order to achieve their ends. But he loved your
mother, and he loved you."
This was
not the sort of detail I’d been seeking, but it was plain that Vang
was still gripped by emotion, and I decided it would be best to
leave him alone. As I passed behind him, I laid a hand on his
shoulder. He twitched, as if burned by the touch, and I thought he
might respond by covering my hand with his own. But he only nodded
and made a humming noise deep in his throat. I stood there for a few
beats, wishing I could think of something else to say; then I bid
him good night and went off into the darkness to look for
Tan.
One
morning, about a month after this conversation, in the little
seaside town of Vung Tao, Dat quit the circus following an argument
with Vang, and I was forced that same evening to assume the role of
James Bond Cochise. The prospect of performing the entire act in
public–I had previously made token appearances along with Dat–gave
rise to some anxiety, but I was confident in my skill. Tan took in
Dat’s tuxedo jacket a bit, so it would hang nicely, and helped me
paint my face with Native American designs, and when Vang announced
me, standing at the center of our single ring and extolling my
legendary virtues into a microphone, I strode into the rich yellow
glow of the tent, the warmth smelling of sawdust and cowshit (a
small herd had been foraging on the spot before we arrived), with my
arms overhead, flourishing the belt that held my hatchets and
knives, and enjoying the applause. All seven rows of the bleachers
were full, the audience consisting of resort workers, fishermen and
their families, with a smattering of tourists, mainly backpackers,
but also a group of immensely fat Russian women who had been
transported from a hotel farther along the beach in cyclos pedaled
by diminutive Vietnamese men. They were in a good mood, thanks to a
comic skit in which Tan played a farm girl and Tranh a village
buffoon hopelessly in love with her, his lust manifested by a
telescoping rod that could spring outward to a length of fourteen
inches and was belted to his hips beneath a pair of baggy
trousers.
Mei,
dressed in a red sequined costume that pushed up her breasts and
squeezed the tops of her chubby thighs like sausage ends, assumed a
spread-eagled position in front of the board, and the crowd fell
silent. Sitting in a wooden chair at ring center, Vang switched on
the music, the theme from a venerable James Bond film. I displayed a
knife to the bleachers, took my mark, and sent the blade hurtling
toward Mei, planting it solidly in the wood an inch above her head.
The first four or five throws were perfect, outlining Mei’s head and
shoulders. The crowd oohed and ahhed each time the blade sank into
the board. Supremely confident now, I flung the knives as I whirled
and ducked, pretending to dodge the gunshots embedded in the theme
music, throwing from a crouch, on my stomach, leaping–but then I
made the slightest of missteps, and the knife I hurled flashed so
close to Mei, it nicked the fleshy portion of her upper arm. She
shrieked and staggered away from the board, holding the injury. She
remained stock-still for an instant, fixing me with a look of
anguish, then bolted for the entrance. The crowd was stunned. Vang
jumped up, the microphone dangling from his hand. For a second or
two, I was rooted to the spot, not certain what to do. The bombastic
music isolated me as surely as if it were a fence, and when Tranh
shut it off, the fence collapsed, and I felt the pressure of a
thousand eyes upon me. Unable to withstand it, I followed Mei out
into the night.
The main
tent had been erected atop a dune overlooking a bay and a stretch of
sandy beach. It was a warm, windy night, and as I emerged from the
tent the tall grasses cresting the dune were blown flat by a gust.
From behind me, Vang’s amplified voice sounded above the rush of the
wind and the heavier beat of the surf, urging the audience to stay
seated, the show would continue momentarily. The moon was almost
full, but it hung behind the clouds, edging an alp of cumulus with
silver, and I couldn’t find Mei at first. Then the moon sailed
clear, paving a glittering avenue across the black water, touching
the plumes of combers with phosphorous, brightening the sand, and I
spotted Mei–recognizable by her red costume–and two other figures on
the beach some thirty feet below; they appeared to be ministering to
her.
I started
down the face of the dune, slipped in the loose sand and fell. As I
scrambled to my feet, I saw Tan struggling up the slope toward me.
She caught at the lapels of my tuxedo for balance, nearly causing me
to fall again, and we swayed together, holding each other upright.
She wore a nylon jacket over her costume, which was like Mei’s in
every respect but one–it was a shade of peacock blue spangled with
silver stars. Her shining hair was gathered at the nape of her neck,
crystal earrings sparkled in the lobes of her ears, her dark eyes
brimmed with light. She looked made of light, an illusion that would
fade once the clouds regrouped about the moon. But the thing that
most affected me was not her beauty. Moment to moment, that was
something of which I was always aware, how she flowed between states
of beauty, shifting from schoolgirl to seductress to serious young
woman, and now this starry incarnation materialized before me, the
devi of a world that existed only for this precise second. . . . No,
it was her calmness that affected me most. It poured over me,
coursing around and through me, and even before she spoke, not
mentioning what had happened to Mei, as if it were not a potentially
fatal accident, a confidence-destroyer that would cause me to falter
whenever I picked up a knife–even before that I was convinced by her
unruffled manner that everything was as usual, there had been a
slight disruption of routine, and now we should go back into the
tent because Vang was running out of jokes to tell.
"Mei . . ."
I said as we clambered over the crest of the dune, and Tan said,
"It’s not even a scratch." She took my arm and guided me toward the
entrance, walking briskly yet unhurriedly.
I felt I’d
been hypnotized–not by a sonorous voice or the pendulum swing of a
shiny object, but by a heightened awareness of the ordinary, the
steady pulse of time, all the background rhythms of the universe. I
was filled with an immaculate calm, distant from the crowd and the
booming music. It seemed that I wasn’t throwing the knives so much
as I was fitting them into slots and letting the turning of the
earth whisk them away to thud and quiver in the board, creating a
figure of steel slightly larger than the figure of soft brown flesh
and peacock blue silk it contained. Dat had never received such
applause–I think the crowd believed Mei’s injury had been a trick
designed to heighten suspense, and they showed their enthusiasm by
standing as Tan and I took our bows and walked together through the
entranceway. Once outside, she pressed herself against me, kissed my
cheek, and said she would see me later. Then she went off toward the
rear of the tent to change for the finale.
Under
normal circumstances, I would have gone to help with the major, but
on this occasion, feeling disconnected and now, bereft of Tan’s
soothing influence, upset at having injured Mei, I wandered along
the top of the dune until I came to a gully choked with grasses that
afforded protection from the wind, which was still gusting hard,
filling the air with grit. I sat down amidst the grass and looked
off along the curve of the beach. About fifteen meters to the north,
the sand gave out into a narrow shingle and the land planed upward
into low hills thick with vegetation. Half-hidden by the foliage was
a row of small houses with sloping tiled roofs and open porches;
they stood close to the sea, and chutes of yellow light spilled from
their windows to illuminate the wavelets beneath. The moon was high,
no longer silvery, resembling instead a piece of bloated bone china
mottled with dark splotches, and, appearing to lie directly beneath
it among a hammock of coconut palms was a pink stucco castle that
guarded the point of the bay: the hotel where the tourists who had
attended our performance were staying. I could make out antlike
shapes scurrying back and forth on the brightly lit crescent of sand
in front of it, and I heard a faint music shredded by the wind. The
water beyond the break was black as opium.
My thoughts
turned not to the accident with Mei, but to how I had performed with
Tan. The act had passed quickly, a flurry of knives and light, yet
now I recalled details: the coolness of the metal between my
fingers; Vang watching anxiously off to the side; a fiery glint on a
hatchet blade tumbling toward a spot between Tan’s legs. My most
significant memory, however, was of her eyes. How they had seemed to
beam instructions, orchestrating my movements, so forceful that I’d
imagined she was capable of deflecting a blade if my aim proved
errant. Given my emotional investment in her, my absolute
faith–though we’d never discussed it–in our future together, it was
easy to believe she had that kind of power over me. Easy to believe,
and somewhat troublesome, for it struck me that we were not equals,
we couldn’t be as long as she controlled every facet of the
relationship. And having concluded this, as if the conclusion were
the end of all possible logics concerning the subject, my mind
slowed and became mired in despondency.
I’m not
certain how long I had been sitting when Tan came walking down the
beach, brushing windblown hair from her eyes. She had on a man’s
short-sleeved shirt and a pair of loose-fitting shorts, and was
carrying a blanket. I was hidden from her by the grass, and I was at
such a remove from things, not comfortable with but accepting of my
solitude, I was half-inclined to let her pass; but then she stopped
and called my name, and I, by reflex, responded. She spotted me and
picked up her pace. When she reached my side she said without a hint
of reproval, merely as if stating a fact, "You went so far. I wasn’t
sure I’d find you." She spread the blanket on the sand and
encouraged me to join her on it. I felt guilty at having had
clinical thoughts about her and our relationship–to put this sort of
practical construction on what I tended to view as a magical union,
a thing of fate and dharma, seemed unworthy, and as a consequence I
was at a loss for words. The wind began to blow in a long unbroken
stream off the water, and she shivered. I asked if she would like to
put on my tuxedo jacket. She said, "No." The line of her mouth
tightened, and with a sudden movement, she looked away from me,
half-turning her upper body. I thought I must have done something to
annoy her, and this so unnerved me, I didn’t immediately notice that
she was unbuttoning her shirt. She shrugged out of it, held it
balled against her chest for a moment, then set it aside; she
glanced at me over her shoulder, engaging my eyes. I could tell her
usual calm was returning–I could almost see her filling with it–and
I realized then that this calmness of hers was not hers alone, it
was ours, a byproduct of our trust in one another, and what had
happened in the main tent had not been a case of her controlling me,
saving me from panic, but had been the two of us channeling each
other’s strength, converting nervousness and fear to certainty and
precision. Just as we were doing now.
I kissed
her mouth, her small breasts, exulting in their salty aftertaste of
brine and dried sweat. Then I drew her down onto the blanket, and
what followed, despite clumsiness and flashes of insecurity, was
somehow both fierce and chaste, the natural culmination of two years
of longing, of unspoken treaties and accommodations. Afterward,
pressed together, wrapped in the silk and warmth of spent splendor,
whispering the old yet never less than astonishing secrets and
promises, saying things that had long gone unsaid, I remember
thinking that I would do anything for her. This was not an abstract
thought, not simply the atavistic reaction of a man new to a feeling
of mastery, though I can’t deny that was in me–the sexual and the
violent break from the same spring–but was an understanding founded
on a considered appreciation of the trials I might have to overcome
and the blood I might have to shed in order to keep her safe in a
world where wife-murder was a crime for profit and patricide an act
of self-defense. It’s strange to recall with what a profound sense
of reverence I accepted the idea that I was now willing to engage in
every sort of human behavior, ranging from the self-sacrificial to
the self-gratifying to the perpetration of acts so abhorrent that,
once committed, they would harrow me until the end of my
days.
At dawn the
clouds closed in, the wind died, and the sea lay flat. Now and again
a weak sun penetrated the overcast, causing the water to glisten
like an expanse of freshly applied gray paint. We climbed to the top
of the dune and sat with our arms around each other, not wanting to
return to the circus, to break the elastic of the long moment
stretching backward into night. The unstirring grass, the energyless
water and dead sky, made it appear that time itself had been
becalmed. The beach in front of the pink hotel was littered with
debris, deserted. You might have thought that our lovemaking had
succeeded in emptying the world. But soon we caught sight of Tranh
and Mei walking toward us across the dune, Kim and Kai skipping
along behind. All were dressed in shorts and shirts, and Tranh
carried a net shopping bag that–I saw as he lurched up, stumbling in
the sand–contained mineral water and sandwiches.
"What have
you kids been up to?" he asked, displaying an exaggerated degree of
concern.
Mei punched
him on the arm, and, after glancing back and forth between us, as if
he suddenly understood the situation, Tranh put on a shocked face
and covered his mouth with a hand. Giggling, Kai and Kim went
scampering down onto the beach. Mei tugged at Tranh’s shirt, but he
ignored her and sank onto his knees beside me. "I bet you’re
hungry," he said, and his round face was split by a gaptoothed grin.
He thrust a sandwich wrapped in a paper napkin at me. "Better eat!
You’re probably going to need your strength."
With an
apologetic look in Tan’s direction, Mei kneeled beside him; she
unwrapped sandwiches and opened two bottles of water. She caught my
eye, frowned, pointed to her arm, and shook her forefinger as she
might have done with a mischievous child. "Next time don’t dance
around so much," she said, and pretended to sprinkle something on
one of the sandwiches. "Or else one night I’ll put special herbs in
your dinner." Tranh kept peering at Tan, then at me, grinning,
nodding, and finally, with a laugh, Tan pushed him onto his back.
Down by the water Kai and Kim were tossing pebbles into the sea with
girlish ineptitude. Mei called to them and they came running, their
braids bouncing; they threw themselves bellyfirst onto the sand,
squirmed up to sitting positions, and began gobbling
sandwiches.
"Don’t eat
so fast!" Mei cautioned. "You’ll get sick."
Kim, the
younger of the sisters, squinched her face at Mei and shoved half
the sandwich into her mouth. Tranh contorted his features so his
lips nearly touched his nose, and Kim laughed so hard she sprayed
bits of bread and fried fish. Tan told her that this was not
ladylike. Both girls sat up straight, nibbled their sandwiches–they
took it to heart whenever Tan spoke to them about being
ladies.
"Didn’t you
bring anything beside fish?" I asked, inspecting the filling of my
sandwich.
"I guess we
should have brought oysters," said Tranh. "Maybe some rhinoceros
horn, some . . ."
"That
stuff’s for old guys like you," I told him. "Me, I just need peanut
butter."
After we
had done eating, Tranh lay back with his head in Mei’s lap and told
a story about a talking lizard that had convinced a farmer it was
the Buddha. Kim and Kai cuddled together, sleepy from their feast.
Tan leaned into the notch of my shoulder, and I put my arm around
her. It came to me then, not suddenly, but gradually, as if I were
being immersed in the knowledge like a man lowering his body into a
warm bath, that for the first time in my life–all the life I could
remember–I was at home. These people were my family, and the sense
of dislocation that had burdened me all those years had evaporated.
I closed my eyes and buried my face in Tan’s hair, trying to hold
onto the feeling, to seal it inside my head so I would never forget
it.
Two men in
T-shirts and bathing suits came walking along the water’s edge in
our direction. When they reached the dune they climbed up to where
we were sitting. Both were not much older than I, and judging by
their fleshiness and soft features, I presumed them to be Americans,
a judgment confirmed when the taller of the two, a fellow with a
heavy jaw and hundreds of white beads threaded on the strings of his
long black hair, lending him a savage appearance, said, "You guys
are with that tent show, right?"
Mei, who
did not care for Americans, stared meanly at him, but Tranh, who
habitually viewed them as potential sources of income, told him that
we were, indeed, performers with the circus. Kai and Kim whispered
and giggled, and Tranh asked the American what his friend–skinnier,
beadless, dull-eyed and open-mouthed, with a complicated headset
covering his scalp–was studying.
"Parasailing. We’re going parasailing . . . if there’s ever
any wind and the program doesn’t screw up. I woulda left him at the
house, but the program’s fucked. Didn’t want his ass convulsing." He
extracted a sectioned strip of plastic from his shirt pocket; each
square of plastic held a gelatin capsule shaped like a cut gem and
filled with blue fluid. "Wanna brighten your day?" He dangled the
strip as if tempting us with a treat. When no one accepted his
offer, he shrugged, returned the strip to his pocket; he glanced
down at me. "Hey, that shit with the knives . . . that was part of
the fucking plan! Especially when you went benihana on Little Plum
Blossom." He jerked his thumb at Mei and then stood nodding, gazing
at the sea, as if receiving a transmission from that quarter.
"Okay," he said. "Okay. It could be the drugs, but the trusty inner
voice is telling me my foreign ways seem ludicrous . . . perhaps
even offensive. It well may be that I am somewhat ludicrous. And I’m
pretty torched, so I have to assume I’ve been offensive."
Tranh made
to deny this, Mei grunted, Kim and Kai looked puzzled, and Tan asked
the American if he was on vacation.
"Thank
you," he said to Tan. "Beautiful lady. I am always grateful for the
gift of courtesy. No, my friend and I–and two others–are playing at
the hotel. We’re musicians." He took out his wallet, which had been
hinged over the waist of his trunks, and removed from it a thin gold
square the size of a postage stamp; he handed it to Tan. "Have you
seen these? They’re new . . . souvenir things, like. They just play
once, but it’ll give you a taste. Press your finger on it until it
you hear the sound. Then don’t touch it again–they get extremely
hot."
Tan started
to do as he instructed but he said, "No, wait till we’re gone. I
want to imagine you enjoyed hearing it. If you do, come on down to
the hotel after you’re finished tonight. You’ll be my
guests."
"Is it one
of your songs?" I asked, curious about him now that he had turned
out to be more complicated than he first appeared.
He said,
yes, it was an original composition.
"What’s it
called?" Tranh asked.
"We haven’t
named it yet," said the American; then, after a pause: "What’s the
name of your circus?"
Almost as
one we said, "Radiant Green Star."
"Perfect,"
said the American.
Once the
two men were out of earshot, Tan pressed her fingertip to the gold
square, and soon a throbbing music issued forth, simply structured
yet intricately layered by synthesizers, horns, guitars, densely
figured by theme and subtle counter-theme, both insinuating and
urgent. Kai and Kim stood and danced with one another. Tranh bobbed
his head, tapped his foot, and even Mei was charmed, swaying, her
eyes closed. Tan kissed me, and we watched a thin white smoke
trickle upward from the square, which itself began to shrink, and I
thought how amazing it was that things were often not what they
seemed, and what a strange confluence of possibilities it had taken
to bring all the troupe together–and the six of us were the
entire troupe, for Vang was never really part of us even when he was
there, and though the major was rarely with us, he was always there,
a shadow in the corners of our minds. . . . How magical and
ineluctable a thing it was for us all to be together at the precise
place and time when a man–a rather unprepossessing man at
that–walked up from a deserted beach and presented us with a golden
square imprinted with a song that he named for our circus, a song
that so accurately evoked the mixture of the commonplace and the
exotic that characterized life in Radiant Green Star, music that was
like smoke, rising up for a few perfect moments, and then vanishing
with the wind.
Had Vang
asked me at any point during the months that followed to tell him
about love, I might have spoken for hours, answering him not with
definitions, principles, or homilies, but specific instances,
moments, and anecdotes. I was happy. Despite the gloomy nature of my
soul, I could think of no word that better described how I felt.
Though I continued to study my father, to follow his comings and
goings, his business maneuvers and social interactions, I now
believed that I would never seek to confront him, never try to claim
my inheritance. I had all I needed to live, and I only wanted to
keep those I loved safe and free from worry.
Tan and I
did not bother to hide our relationship, and I expected Vang to rail
at me for my transgression. I half-expected him to drive me away
from the circus–indeed, I prepared for that eventuality. But he
never said a word. I did notice a certain cooling of the atmosphere.
He snapped at me more often and on occasion refused to speak; yet
that was the extent of his anger. I didn’t know how to take this.
Either, I thought, he had overstated his concern for Tan or else he
had simply accepted the inevitable. That explanation didn’t satisfy
me, however. I suspected that he might have something more important
on his mind, something so weighty that my involvement with his niece
seemed a triviality by comparison. And one day, some seven months
after Tan and I became lovers, my suspicions were proved
correct.
I went to
the trailer at mid-afternoon, thinking Vang would be in town. We
were camped at the edge of a hardwood forest on a cleared acre of
red dirt near Buon Ma Thuot in the Central Highlands, not far from
the Cambodian border. Vang usually spent the day before a
performance putting up posters, and I had intended to work on the
computer; but when I entered, I saw him standing by his desk,
folding a shirt, a suitcase open on the chair beside him. I asked
what he was doing and he handed me a thick envelope; inside were the
licenses and deeds of ownership relating to the circus and its
property. "I’ve signed everything over," he said. "If you have any
problems, contact my lawyer."
"I don’t
understand," I said, dumfounded. "You’re leaving?"
He bent to
the suitcase and laid the folded shirt inside it. "You can move into
the trailer tonight. You and Tan. She’ll be able to put it in order.
I suppose you’ve noticed that she’s almost morbidly neat." He
straightened, pressed his hand against his lower back as if stricken
by a pain. "The accounts, the bookings for next year . . . it’s all
in the computer. Everything else . . ." He gestured at the cabinets
on the walls. "You remember where things are."
I couldn’t
get a grasp on the situation, overwhelmed by the thought that I was
now responsible for Green Star, by the fact that the man who for
years had been the only consistent presence in my life was about to
walk out the door forever. "Why are you leaving?"
He turned
to me, frowning. "If you must know, I’m ill."
"But why
would you want to leave? We’ll just . . ."
"I’m not
going to recover," he said flatly.
I peered at
him, trying to detect the signs of his mortality, but he looked no
thinner, no grayer, than he had for some time. I felt the stirrings
of a reaction that I knew he would not want to see, and I tamped
down my emotions. "We can care for you here," I said.
He began to
fold another shirt. "I plan to join my sister and her husband in
what they insist upon calling–" he clicked his tongue against his
teeth "–Heaven."
I recalled
the talks I’d had with Tan in which she had decried the process of
uploading the intelligence, the personality. If the old man was
dying, there was no real risk involved. Still, the concept of such a
mechanical transmogrification did not sit well with me.
"Have you
nothing to say on the subject?" he asked. "Tan was quite
voluble."
"You’ve
told her, then?"
"Of
course." He inspected the tail of the shirt he’d been folding, and
finding a hole, cast it aside. "We’ve said our goodbyes."
He
continued to putter about, and as I watched him shuffling among the
stacks of magazines and newspapers, kicking file boxes and books
aside, dust rising wherever he set his hand, a tightness in my chest
began to loosen, to work its way up into my throat. I went to the
door and stood looking out, seeing nothing, letting the strong
sunlight harden the glaze of my feelings. When I turned back, he was
standing close to me, suitcase in hand. He held out a folded piece
of paper and said, "This is the code by which you can contact me
once I’ve been . . ." He laughed dryly. "Processed, I imagine, would
be the appropriate verb. At any rate, I hope you will let me know
what you decide concerning your father."
It was in
my mind to tell him that I had no intention of contending with my
father, but I thought that this would disappoint him, and I merely
said that I would do as he asked. We stood facing one another, the
air thick with unspoken feelings, with vibrations that communicated
an entire history comprised of such mute, awkward moments. "If I’m
to have a last walk in the sun," he said at length, "you’ll have to
let me pass."
That at the
end of his days he viewed me only as a minor impediment–it angered
me. But I reminded myself that this was all the sentiment of which
he was capable. Without asking permission, I embraced him. He patted
me lightly on the back and said, "I know you’ll take care of
things." And with that, he pushed past me and walked off in the
direction of the town, vanishing behind one of the parked
trucks.
I went into
the rear of the trailer, into the partitioned cubicle where Vang
slept, and sat down on his bunk. His pillowcase bore a silk-screened
image of a beautiful Vietnamese woman and the words HONEY LADY KEEP
YOU COMFORT EVERY NIGHT. In the cabinet beside his bed were a broken
clock, a small plaster bust of Ho Chi Minh, a few books, several
pieces of hard candy, and a plastic key chain in the shape of a
butterfly. The meagerness of the life these items described caught
at my emotions, and I thought I might weep, but it was as if by
assuming Vang’s position as the owner of Green Star, I had undergone
a corresponding reduction in my natural responses, and I remained
dry-eyed. I felt strangely aloof from myself, connected to the life
of my mind and body by a tube along which impressions of the world
around me were now and then transmitted. Looking back on my years
with Vang, I could make no sense of them. He had nurtured and
educated me, yet the sum of all that effort–not given cohesion by
the glue of affection–came to scraps of memory no more illustrative
of a comprehensible whole than were the memories of my mother. They
had substance, yet no flavor . . . none, that is, except for a dusty
gray aftertaste that I associated with disappointment and
loss.
I didn’t
feel like talking to anyone, and for want of anything else to do, I
went to the desk and started inspecting the accounts, working
through dusk and into the night. When I had satisfied myself that
all was in order, I turned to the bookings. Nothing out of the
ordinary. The usual villages, the occasional festival. But when I
accessed the bookings for the month of March, I saw that during the
week of the 17th through the 23rd–the latter date just ten days from
my birthday–we were scheduled to perform in Binh Khoi.
I thought
this must be a mistake–Vang had probably been thinking of Binh Khoi
and my father while recording a new booking and had inadvertently
put down the wrong name. But when I called up the contract, I found
that no mistake had been made. We were to be paid a great deal of
money, sufficient to guarantee a profitable year, but I doubted that
Vang’s actions had been motivated by our financial needs. He must, I
thought, have seen the way things were going with Tan and me, and he
must have realized that I would never risk her in order to avenge a
crime committed nearly two decades before–thus he had decided to
force a confrontation between me and my father. I was furious, and
my first impulse was to break the contract; but after I had calmed
down I realized that doing so would put us all at risk–the citizens
of Binh Khoi were not known for their generosity or flexibility, and
if I were to renege on Vang’s agreement they would surely pursue the
matter in the courts. I would have no chance of winning a judgment.
The only thing to do was to play the festival and steel myself to
ignore the presence of my father. Perhaps he would be elsewhere, or,
even if he was in residence, perhaps he would not attend our little
show. Whatever the circumstances, I swore I would not be caught in
this trap, and when my eighteenth birthday arrived I would go to the
nearest Sony office and take great pleasure in telling Vang–whatever
was left of him–that his scheme had failed.
I was still
sitting there, trying to comprehend whether or not by contracting
the engagement, Vang hoped to provide me with a basis for an
informed decision, or if his interests were purely self-serving,
when Tan stepped into the trailer. She had on a sleeveless plaid
smock, the garment she wore whenever she was cleaning, and it was
evident that she’d been crying–the skin beneath her eyes was puffy
and red. But she had regained her composure, and she listened
patiently, perched on the edge of the desk, while I told her all I’d
been thinking about Vang and what he had done to us.
"Maybe it’s
for the best," she said after I had run down. "This way you’ll be
sure you’ve done what you had to do."
I was
startled by her reaction. "Are you saying that you think I should
kill my father . . . that I should even entertain the
possibility?"
She
shrugged. "That’s for you to decide."
"I’ve
decided already," I said.
"Then
there’s not a problem."
The studied
neutrality of her attitude puzzled me. "You don’t think I’ll stand
by my decision, do you?"
She put a
hand to her brow, hiding her face–a gesture that reminded me of
Vang. "I don’t think you have decided, and I don’t think you should
. . . not until you see your father." She pinched a fold of skin
above the bridge of her nose, then looked up at me. "Let’s not talk
about this now."
We sat
silently for half a minute or thereabouts, each following the path
of our own thoughts; then she wrinkled up her nose and said, "It
smells bad in here. Do you want to get some air?"
We climbed
onto the roof of the trailer and sat gazing at the shadowy line of
the forest to the west, the main tent bulking up above it, and a sky
so thick with stars that the familiar constellations were
assimilated into new and busier cosmic designs: a Buddha face with a
diamond on its brow, a tiger’s head, a palm tree–constructions of
sparkling pinlights against a midnight blue canvas stretched from
horizon to horizon. The wind brought the scent of sweet rot and the
less pervasive odor of someone’s cooking. Somebody switched on a
radio in the main tent; a Chinese orchestra whined and jangled. I
felt I was sixteen again, that Tan and I had just met, and I thought
perhaps we had chosen to occupy this place where we spent so many
hours before we were lovers, because here we could banish the
daunting pressures of the present, the threat of the future, and be
children again. But although those days were scarcely two years
removed, we had forever shattered the comforting illusions and
frustrating limitations of childhood. I lay back on the aluminum
roof, which still held a faint warmth of the day, and Tan hitched up
her smock about her waist and mounted me, bracing her hands on my
chest as I slipped inside her. Framed by the crowded stars, features
made mysterious by the cowl of her hair, she seemed as distant and
unreal as the imagined creatures of my zodiac; but this illusion,
too, was shattered as she began to rock her hips with an
accomplished passion and lifted her face to the sky, transfigured by
a look of exalted, almost agonized yearning, like one of those
Renaissance angels marooned on a scrap of painted cloud who has just
witnessed something amazing pass overhead, a miracle of glowing
promise too perfect to hold in the mind. She shook her head wildly
when she came, her hair flying all to one side so that it resembled
in shape the pennant flying on the main tent, a dark signal of
release, and then collapsed against my chest. I held onto her hips,
continuing to thrust until the knot of heat in my groin shuddered
out of me, leaving a residue of black peace into which the last
shreds of my thought were subsumed.
The sweat
dried on our skin, and still we lay there, both–I believed–aware
that once we went down from the roof, the world would close around
us, restore us to its troubled spin. Someone changed stations on the
radio, bringing in a Cambodian program–a cooler, wispier music
played. A cough sounded close by the trailer, and I raised myself to
an elbow, wanting to see who it was. The major was making his way
with painful slowness across the cleared ground, leaning on his
staff. In the starlight his grotesque shape was lent a certain
anonymity–he might have been a figure in a fantasy game, an old
down-at-heels magician shrouded in a heavy, ragged cloak, or a
beggar on a quest. He shuffled a few steps more, and then, shaking
with effort, sank to his knees. For several seconds he remained
motionless, then he scooped a handful of the red dirt and held it up
to his face. And I recalled that Buon Ma Thuot was near the location
of his fictive–or if not fictive, ill-remembered–firebase. Firebase
Ruby. Built upon the red dirt of a defoliated plantation.
Tan sat up
beside me and whispered, "What’s he doing?"
I put a
finger to my lips, urging her to silence; I was convinced that the
major would not expose himself to the terror of the open sky unless
moved by some equally terrifying inner force, and I hoped he might
do something that would illuminate the underpinnings of his
mystery.
He let the
dirt sift through his fingers and struggled to stand. Failed and
sagged onto his haunches. His head fell back, and he held a
spread-fingered hand up to it as if trying to shield himself from
the starlight. His quavery voice ran out of him like a shredded
battle flag. "Turn back!" he said. "Oh, God! God! Turn
back!"
During the
next four months, I had little opportunity to brood over the
prospect of meeting my father. Dealing with the minutiae of Green
Star’s daily operation took most of my energy and hours, and
whenever I had a few minutes respite, Tan was there to fill them. So
it was that by the time we arrived in Binh Khoi, I had made scarcely
any progress in adjusting to the possibility that I might soon come
face-to-face with the man who had killed my mother.In one
aspect, Binh Khoi was the perfect venue for us, since the town
affected the same conceit as the circus, being designed to resemble
a fragment of another time. It was situated near the Pass of the
Ocean Clouds in the Truong Son Mountains some forty kilometers north
of Danang, and many of the homes there were afforded a view of green
hills declining toward the Coastal Plain. On the morning we arrived
those same hills were half-submerged in thick white fog, the plain
was totally obscured, and a pale mist had infiltrated the narrow
streets, casting an air of ominous enchantment over the place. The
oldest of the houses had been built no more than fifty years before,
yet they were all similar to nineteenth century houses that still
existed in certain sections of Hanoi: two and three stories tall and
fashioned of stone, painted dull yellow and gray and various other
sober hues, with sharply sloping roofs of dark green tile and
compounds hidden by high walls and shaded by bougainvillea, papaya,
and banana trees. Except for street lights in the main square and
pedestrians in bright eccentric clothing, we might have been driving
through a hill station during the 1800s; but I knew that hidden
behind this antiquated façade were state-of-the-art security systems
that could have vaporized us had we not been cleared to
enter.
The most
unusual thing about Binh Khoi was its silence. I’d never been in a
place where people lived in any considerable quantity that was so
hushed, devoid of the stew of sounds natural to a human environment.
No hens squabbling or dogs yipping, no whining motor scooters or
humming cars, no children at play. In only one area was there
anything approximating normal activity and noise: the marketplace,
which occupied an unpaved street leading off the square. Here men
and women in coolie hats hunkered beside baskets of jackfruit,
chilies, garlic, custard apples, durians, geckos, and dried fish;
meat and caged puppies and monkeys and innumerable other foodstuffs
were sold in canvas-roofed stalls; and the shoppers, mostly male
couples, haggled with the vendors, occasionally venting their dismay
at the prices . . . this despite the fact that any one of them could
have bought everything in the market without blinking. Though the
troupe shared their immersion in a contrived past, I found the depth
of their pretense alarming and somewhat perverse. As I maneuvered
the truck cautiously through the press, they peered incuriously at
me through the windows–faces rendered exotic and nearly unreadable
by tattoos and implants and caps of silver wire and winking light
that appeared to be woven into their hair–and I thought I could feel
their amusement at the shabby counterfeit we offered of their more
elegantly realized illusion. I believe I might have hated them for
the fashionable play they made of arguing over minuscule sums with
the poor vendors, for the triviality of spirit this mockery implied,
if I had not already hated them so completely for being my father’s
friends and colleagues.
At the end
of the street, beyond the last building, lay a grassy field bordered
by a low whitewashed wall. Strings of light bulbs linked the banana
trees and palms that grew close to the wall on three sides, and I
noticed several paths leading off into the jungle that were lit in
the same fashion. On the fourth side, beyond the wall, the land
dropped off into a notch, now choked with fog, and on the far side
of the notch, perhaps fifty yards away, a massive hill with a sheer
rock face and the ruins of an old temple atop it lifted from the
fog, looming above the field–it was such a dramatic sight and so
completely free of mist, every palm frond articulated, every
vine-enlaced crevice and knob of dark, discolored stone showing
clear, that I wondered if it might be a clever projection, another
element of Binh Khoi’s decor.
We spent
the morning and early afternoon setting up, and once I was satisfied
that everything was in readiness, I sought out Tan, thinking we
might go for a walk; but she was engaged in altering Kai’s costume.
I wandered into the main tent and busied myself by making sure the
sawdust had been spread evenly. Kai was swinging high above on a
rope suspended from the metal ring at the top of the tent, and one
of our miniature tigers had climbed a second rope and was clinging
to it by its furry hands, batting at her playfully whenever she
swooped near. Tranh and Mei were playing cards in the bleachers, and
Kim was walking hand-in-hand with our talking monkey, chattering
away as if the creature could understand her–now and then it would
turn its white face to her and squeak in response, saying "I love
you" and "I’m hungry" and other equally non-responsive phrases. I
stood by the entranceway, feeling rather paternal toward my little
family gathered under the lights, and I was just considering whether
or not I should return to the trailer and see if Tan had finished,
when a baritone voice sounded behind me, saying, "Where can I find
Vang Ky?"
My father
was standing with hands in pockets a few feet away, wearing black
trousers and a gray shirt of some shiny material. He looked softer
and heavier than he did in his photographs, and the flying fish
tattoo on his cheek was now surrounded by more than half-a-dozen
tiny emblems denoting his business connections. With his immense
head, his shaved skull gleaming in the hot lights, he himself seemed
the emblem of some monumental and soul-less concern. At his
shoulder, over a foot shorter than he, was a striking Vietnamese
woman with long straight hair, dressed in tight black slacks and a
matching tunic: Phuong Ahn Nguyen. She was staring at me
intently.
Stunned, I
managed to get out that Vang was no longer with the circus, and my
father said, "How can that be? He’s the owner, isn’t he?"
Shock was
giving way to anger, anger so fulminant I could barely contain it.
My hands trembled. If I’d had one of my knives to hand, I would have
plunged it without a thought into his chest. I did the best I could
to conceal my mood and told him what had become of Vang; but it
seemed that as I catalogued each new detail of his face and body–a
frown line, a reddened ear lobe, a crease in his fleshy neck–a vial
of some furious chemical was tipped over and added to the mix of my
blood.
"Goddamn
it!" he said, casting his eyes up to the canvas; he appeared
distraught. "Shit!" He glanced down at me. "Have you got his access
code? It’s never the same once they go to Heaven. I’m not sure they
really know what’s going on. But I guess it’s my only
option."
"I doubt
he’d approve of my giving the code to a stranger," I told
him.
"We’re not
strangers," he said. "Vang was my father-in-law. We had a
falling-out after my wife died. I hoped having the circus here for a
week, I’d be able to persuade him to sit down and talk. There’s no
reason for us to be at odds."
I suppose
the most astonishing thing he said was that Vang was his
father-in-law, and thus my grandfather. I didn’t know what to make
of that; I could think of no reason he might have for lying, yet it
raised a number of troubling questions. But his last statement, his
implicit denial of responsibility for my mother’s death . . . it had
come so easily to his lips! Hatred flowered in me like a cold star,
acting to calm me, allowing me to exert a measure of control over my
anger.
Phoung
stepped forward and put a hand on my chest; my heart pounded against
the pressure of her palm. "Is anything wrong?" she asked.
"I’m . . .
surprised," I said. "That’s all. I didn’t realize Vang had a
son-in-law."
Her make-up
was severe, her lips painted a dark mauve, her eyes shaded by the
same color, but in the fineness of her features and the long oval
shape of her face, she bore a slight resemblance to Tan.
"Why are
you angry?" she asked.
My father
eased her aside. "It’s all right. I came on pretty strong–he’s got
every right to be angry. Why don’t the two of us . . . what’s your
name, kid?"
"Dat," I
said, though I was tempted to tell him the truth.
"Dat and I
will have a talk," he said to Phuong. "I’ll meet you back at the
house."
We went
outside, and Phuong, displaying more than a little reluctance,
headed off in the general direction of the trailer. It was going on
dusk and the fog was closing in. The many-colored bulbs strung in
the trees close to the wall and lining the paths had been turned on;
each bulb was englobed by a fuzzy halo, and altogether they imbued
the encroaching jungle with an eerily festive air, as if the spirits
lost in the dark green tangles were planning a party. We stood
beside the wall, beneath the great hill rising from the shifting
fogbank, and my father tried to convince me to hand over the code.
When I refused he offered money, and when I refused his money he
glared at me and said, "Maybe you don’t get it. I really need the
code. What’s it going to take for you to give it to me?"
"Perhaps
it’s you who doesn’t get it," I said. "If Vang wanted you to have
the code he would have given it to you. But he gave it to me,
and to no one else. I consider that a trust, and I won’t break it
unless he signifies that I should."
He looked
off into the jungle, ran a hand across his scalp, and made a
frustrated noise. I doubted he was experienced at rejection, and
though it didn’t satisfy my anger, it pleased me to have rejected
him. Finally he laughed. "Either you’re a hell of a businessman or
an honorable man. Or maybe you’re both. That’s a scary notion." He
shook his head in what I took for amiable acceptance. "Why not call
Vang? Ask him if he’d mind having a talk with me."
I didn’t
understand how this was possible.
"What sort
of computer do you own?" he asked.
I told him
and he said, "That won’t do it. Tell you what. Come over to my house
tonight after your show. You can use my computer to contact him.
I’ll pay for your time."
I was
suddenly suspicious. He seemed to be offering himself to me, making
himself vulnerable, and I did not believe that was in his nature.
His desire to contact Vang might be a charade. What if he had
discovered my identity and was luring me into a trap?
"I don’t
know if I can get away," I said. "It may have to be in the
morning."
He looked
displeased, but said, "Very well." He fingered a business card from
his pocket, gave it to me. "My address." Then he pressed what
appeared to be a crystal button into my hand. "Don’t lose it. Carry
it with you whenever you come. If you don’t, you’ll be picked up on
the street and taken somewhere quite unpleasant."
As soon as
he was out of sight I hurried over to the trailer, intending to sort
things out with Tan. She was outside, sitting on a folding chair,
framed by a spill of hazy yellow light from the door. Her head was
down, and her blouse was torn, the top two buttons missing. I asked
what was wrong; she shook her head and would not meet my eyes. But
when I persisted she said, "That woman . . . the one who works for
your father . . ."
"Phuong?
Did she hurt you?"
She kept
her head down, but I could see her chin quivering. "I was coming to
find you, and I ran into her. She started talking to me. I thought
she was just being friendly, but then she tried to kiss me. And when
I resisted"–she displayed the tear in her blouse–"she did this." She
gathered herself. "She wants me to be with her tonight. If I refuse,
she says she’ll make trouble for us."
It would
have been impossible for me to hate my father more, but this new
insult, this threat to Tan, perfected it, added a finishing color,
like the last brush stroke applied to a masterpiece. I stood a
moment gazing off toward the hill–it seemed I had inside me an
analog to that forbidding shape, something equally stony and vast. I
led Tan into the trailer, sat her down at the desk, and made her
tea; then I repeated all my father had said. "Is it possible," I
asked, "that Vang is my grandfather?"
She held
the teacup in both hands, blew on the steaming liquid and took a
sip. "I don’t know. My family has always been secretive. All my
parents told me was that Vang was once a wealthy man with a loving
family, and that he had lost everything."
"If he is
my grandfather," I said, "then we’re cousins."
She set
down the cup and stared dolefully into it as if she saw in its
depths an inescapable resolution. "I don’t care. If we were brother
and sister, I wouldn’t care."
I pulled
her up, put my arms around her, and she pressed herself against me.
I felt that I was at the center of an enormously complicated knot,
too diminutive to be able to see all its loops and twists. If Vang
was my grandfather, why had he treated me with such coldness?
Perhaps my mother’s death had deadened his heart, perhaps that
explained it. But knowing that Tan and I were cousins, wouldn’t he
have told us the truth when he saw how close we were becoming? Or
was he so old-fashioned that the idea of an intimate union between
cousins didn’t bother him? The most reasonable explanation was that
my father had lied. I saw that now, saw it with absolute clarity. It
was the only possibility that made sense. And if he had lied, it
followed that he knew who I was. And if he knew who I was . .
.
"I have to
kill him," I said. "Tonight . . . it has to be tonight."
I was
prepared to justify the decision, to explain why a course of
inaction would be a greater risk, to lay out all the potentials of
the situation for Tan to analyze, but she pushed me away, just
enough so that she could see my face, and said, "You can’t do it
alone. That woman’s a professional assassin." She rested her
forehead against mine. "I’ll help you."
"That’s
ridiculous! If I . . ."
"Listen to
me, Philip! She can read physical signs, she can tell if someone’s
angry. If they’re anxious. Well, she’ll expect me to be angry. And
anxious. She’ll think it’s just resentment . . . nerves. I’ll be
able to get close to her."
"And kill
her? Will you be able to kill her?"
Tan broke
from the embrace and went to stand at the doorway, gazing out at the
fog. Her hair had come unbound, spilling down over her shoulders and
back, the ribbon that had tied it dangling like a bright blue river
winding across a ground of black silk.
"I’ll ask
Mei to give me something. She has herbs that will induce sleep." She
glanced back at me. "There are things you can do to insure our
safety once your father’s dead. We should discuss them
now."
I was
amazed by her coolness, how easily she had made the transition from
being distraught. "I can’t ask you to do this," I said.
"You’re not
asking–I’m volunteering." I detected a note of sad distraction in
her voice. "You’d do as much for me."
"Of course,
but if it weren’t for me, you wouldn’t be involved in
this."
"If it
weren’t for you," she said, the sadness even more evident in her
tone, "I’d have no involvements at all."
The first
part of the show that evening, the entrance of the troupe to march
music, Mei leading the way, wearing a red and white majorette’s
uniform, twirling–and frequently dropping–a baton, the tigers
gamboling at her heels; then two comic skits; then Kai and Kim
whirling and spinning aloft in their gold and sequined costumes,
tumbling through the air happy as birds; then another skit and
Tranh’s clownish juggling, pretending to be drunk and making
improbable catches as he tumbled, rolled, and staggered about . . .
all this was received by the predominantly male audience with a
degree of ironic detachment. They laughed at Mei, they whispered and
smirked during the skits, they stared dispassionately at Kim and
Kai, and they jeered Tranh. It was plain that they had come to
belittle us, that doing so validated their sense of superiority. I
registered their reactions, but was so absorbed in thinking about
what was to happen later, they seemed unreal, unimportant, and it
took all my discipline to focus on my own act, a performance
punctuated by a knife hurled from behind me that struck home between
Tan’s legs. There was a burst of enthusiastic cheers, and I turned
to see Phuong some thirty feet away, taking a bow in the
bleachers–it was she who had thrown the knife. She looked at me and
shrugged, with that gesture dismissing my poor skills, and lifted
her arms to receive the building applause. I searched the area
around her for my father, but he was nowhere to be seen.
The
audience remained abuzz, pleased that one of their own had achieved
this victory, but when the major entered, led in by Mei and Tranh,
they fell silent at the sight of his dark, convulsed figure. Leaning
on his staff, he hobbled along the edge of the bleachers, looking
into this and that face as if hoping to find a familiar one, and
then, moving to the center of the ring, he began to tell the story
of Firebase Ruby. I was alarmed at first, but his delivery was
eloquent, lyrical, not the plainspoken style in which he had
originally couched the tale, and the audience was enthralled. When
he came to tell of the letter he had written his wife detailing his
hatred of all things Vietnamese, a uneasy muttering arose from the
bleachers and rapt expressions turned to scowls; but then he was
past that point, and as he described the Viet Cong assault, his
listeners settled back and seemed once again riveted by his
words.
"In the
phosphor light of the hanging flares," he said, "I saw the blood-red
ground spread out before me. Beyond the head-high hedgerows of
coiled steel wire, black-clad men and women coursed from the jungle,
myriad and quick as ants, and, inside the wire, emerging from their
secret warrens, more sprouted from the earth like the demon yield of
some infernal rain. All around me, my men were dying, and even in
the midst of fear, I felt myself the object of a great calm
observance, as if the tiny necklace-strung images of the Buddha the
enemy held in their mouths when they attacked had been empowered to
summon their ribbed original, and somewhere up above the flares, an
enormous face had been conjured from the dark matter of the sky and
was gazing down with serene approval.
"We could
not hold the position long–that was clear. But I had no intention of
surrendering. Drunk on whiskey and adrenaline, I was consumed by the
thought of death, my own and others’, and though I was afraid, I
acted less out of fear than from the madness of battle and a kind of
communion with death, a desire to make death grow and flourish and
triumph. I retreated into the communications bunker and ordered the
corporal in charge to call for an air strike on the coordinates of
Firebase Ruby. When he balked I put a pistol to his head until he
had obeyed. Then I emptied a clip into the radio so no one could
countermand me."
The major
bowed his head and spread his arms, as though preparing for a
supreme display of magic; then his resonant voice sounded forth
again, like the voice of a beast speaking from a cave, rough from
the bones that have torn its throat. His eyes were chunks of
phosphorous burning in the bark of a rotting log.
"When the
explosions began, I was firing from a sandbagged position atop the
communications bunker. The VC pouring from the jungle slowed their
advance, milled about, and those inside the wire looked up in terror
to see the jets screaming overhead, so low I could make out the
stars on their wings. Victory was stitched across the sky in rocket
trails. Gouts of flame gouged the red dirt, opening the tunnels to
the air. The detonations began to blend one into the other, and the
ground shook like a sheet of plywood under the pounding of a hammer.
Clouds of marbled fire and smoke boiled across the earth, rising to
form a dreadful second sky of orange and black, and I came to my
feet, fearful yet delighted, astonished by the enormity of the
destruction I had called down. Then I was knocked flat. Sandbags
fell across my legs, a body flung from God knows where landed on my
back, driving the breath from me, and in the instant before
consciousness fled, I caught the rich stink of napalm.
"In the
morning I awoke and saw a bloody, jawless face with staring blue
eyes pressed close to mine, looking as if it were still trying to
convey a last desperate message. I clawed my way from beneath the
corpse and staggered upright to find myself the lord of a killed
land, of a raw, red scar littered with corpses in the midst of a
charcoaled forest. I went down from the bunker and wandered among
the dead. From every quarter issued the droning of flies. Everywhere
lay arms, legs, and grisly relics I could not identify. I was numb,
I had no feeling apart from a pale satisfaction at having survived.
But as I wandered among the dead, taking notice of the awful
intimacies death had imposed: a dozen child-sized bodies huddled in
a crater, anonymous as a nest of scorched beetles; a horribly burned
woman with buttocks exposed reaching out a clawed hand to touch the
lips of a disembodied head–these and a hundred other such scenes
brought home the truth that I was their author. It wasn’t guilt I
felt then. Guilt was irrelevant. We were all guilty, the dead and
the living, the good and those who had abandoned God. Guilt is our
inevitable portion of the world’s great trouble. No, it was the
recognition that at the moment when I knew the war was lost–my share
of it, at least–I chose not to cut my losses but to align myself
with a force so base and negative that we refuse to admit its place
in human nature and dress it in mystical clothing and call it Satan
or Shiva so as to separate it from ourselves. Perhaps this sort of
choice is a soldier’s virtue, but I can no longer view it in that
light." He tapped his chest with the tip of his staff. "Though I
will never say that my enemies were just, there is justice in what I
have endured since that day. All men sin, all men do evil. And evil
shows itself in our faces." Here he aimed the staff at the audience
and tracked it from face to face, as if highlighting the misdeeds
imprinted on each. "What you see of me now is not the man I was, but
the thing I became at the instant I made my choice. Take from my
story what you will, but understand this: I am unique only in that
the judgment of my days is inscribed not merely on my face, but upon
every inch of my body. We are all of us monsters waiting to be
summoned forth by a moment of madness and pride."
As Tranh
and I led him from the tent, across the damp grass, the major was
excited, almost incoherently so, not by the acclaim he had received,
but because he had managed to complete his story. He plucked at my
sleeve, babbling, bobbing his head, but I paid him no mind,
concerned about Tan, whom I had seen talking to Phuong in the
bleachers. And when she came running from the main tent, a
windbreaker thrown over her costume, I forgot him
entirely.
"We’re not
going directly back to the house," she said. "She wants to take me
to a club on the square. I don’t know when we’ll get to your
father’s."
"Maybe this
isn’t such a good idea. I think we should wait until
morning."
"It’s all
right," she said. "Go to the house and as soon as you’ve dealt with
your father, do exactly what I told you. When you hear us enter the
house, stay out of sight. Don’t do a thing until I come and get you.
Understand?"
"I don’t
know," I said, perplexed at the way she had taken charge.
"Please!"
She grabbed me by the lapels. "Promise you’ll do as I say!
Please!"
I promised,
but as I watched her run off into the dark I had a resurgence of my
old sense of dislocation, and though I had not truly listened to the
major’s story, having been occupied with my own troubles, the sound
of him sputtering and chortling behind me, gloating over the
treasure of his recovered memory, his invention, whatever it was,
caused me to wonder then about the nature of my own choice, and the
story that I might someday tell.
My father’s
house was on Yen Phu Street–two stories of pocked gray stone with
green vented shutters and a green door with a knocker carved in the
shape of a water buffalo’s head. I arrived shortly after midnight
and stood in the lee of the high whitewashed wall that enclosed his
compound. The fog had been cut by a steady drizzle, and no
pedestrians were about. Light slanted from the vents of a shuttered
upstairs window, and beneath it was parked a bicycle in whose basket
rested a dozen white lilies, their stems wrapped in butcher paper. I
imagined that my father had ridden the bicycle to market and had
forgotten to retrieve the flowers after carrying his other purchases
inside. They seemed omenical in their glossy pallor, a sterile
emblem of the bloody work ahead.
The idea of
killing my father held no terrors for me–I had performed the act in
my mind hundreds of times, I’d conceived its every element–and as I
stood there I felt the past accumulating at my back like the cars of
a train stretching for eighteen years, building from my mother’s
death to the shuddering engine of the moment I was soon to inhabit.
All the misgivings that earlier had nagged at me melted away, like
fog before rain. I was secure in my hatred and in the knowledge that
I had no choice, that my father was a menace who would never
fade.
I crossed
the street, knocked, and after a few seconds he admitted me into a
brightly lit alcove with a darkened room opening off to the right.
He was dressed in a voluminous robe of green silk, and as he
proceeded me up the stairway to the left of the alcove, the sight of
his bell-like shape and bald head with the silver plate collaring
the base of his skull . . . these things along with the odor of
jasmine incense led me to imagine that I was being escorted to an
audience with some mysterious religious figure by one of his eunuch
priests. At the head of the stair was a narrow white room furnished
with two padded chrome chairs, a wall screen, and, at the far end, a
desk bearing papers, an ornamental vase, an old-fashioned letter
opener, and a foot-high gilt and bronze Buddha. My father sat down
in one of the chairs, triggered the wall screen’s computer mode with
a penlight, and set about accessing the Sony AI, working through
various menus, all the while chatting away, saying he was sorry he’d
missed our show, he hoped to attend the following night, and how was
I enjoying my stay in Binh Khoi, it often seemed an unfriendly place
to newcomers, but by week’s end I’d feel right at home. I had
brought no weapon, assuming that his security would detect it. The
letter opener, I thought, would do the job. But my hand fell instead
to the Buddha. It would be cleaner, I decided. A single blow. I
picked it up, hefted it. I had anticipated that when the moment
arrived, I would want to make myself known to my father, to relish
his shock and dismay; but I understood that was no longer important,
and I only wanted him to die. In any case, since he likely knew the
truth about me, the dramatic scene I’d envisioned would be greatly
diminished.
"That’s
Thai. Fifteenth century," he said, nodding at the statue, then
returned his attention to the screen. "Beautiful, isn’t
it?"
"Very," I
said.
Then,
without a thought, all thinking necessary having already been done,
and the deed itself merely an automatic function, the final surge of
an eighteen-year-long momentum, I stepped behind him and swung the
statue at the back of his head. I expected to hear a crack but the
sound of impact was plush, muffled, such as might be caused by the
flat of one’s hand striking a pillow. He let out an explosive grunt,
toppled with a twisting motion against the wall, ending up on his
side, facing outward. There was so much blood, I assumed he must be
dead. But then he groaned, his eyes blinked open, and he struggled
to his knees. I saw that I’d hit the silver plate at the base of his
skull. Blood was flowing out around the plate, but it had protected
him from mortal damage. His robe had fallen open, and with his pale
mottled belly bulging from the green silk and the blood streaking
his neck, his smallish features knitted in pain and perplexity, he
looked gross and clownishly pitiable. He held up an unsteady hand to
block a second blow. His mouth worked, and he said "Wait . . ." or
"What . . . ." Which, I can’t be sure. But I was in no mood either
to wait or to explain myself. A clean death might not have affected
me so deeply, but that I had made of a whole healthy life this
repellent half-dead thing wobbling at my feet–it assaulted my moral
foundation, it washed the romantic tint of revenge from the simple,
terrible act of slaughter, and when I struck at him again. this time
smashing the statue down two-handed onto the top of his skull, I was
charged with the kind of fear that afflicts a child when he more or
less by accident wounds a bird with a stone and seeks to hide the
act from God by tossing his victim onto an ash heap. My father
sagged onto his back, blood gushing from his nose and mouth. I
caught a whiff of feces and staggered away, dropping the Buddha. Now
that my purpose had been accomplished, like a bee dying from having
stung its enemy, I felt drained of poison, full of dull surprise
that there had been no more rewarding result.
The
penlight had rolled beneath the second chair. I picked it up, and,
following Tan’s instructions, I used the computer to contact a
security agency in Danang. A blond woman with a brittle manner
appeared on the screen and asked my business. I explained my
circumstances, not bothering to characterize the murder as anything
other than it was–the size of my trust would guarantee my legal
immunity–and also provided her with the number of Vang’s lawyer, as
well as some particulars concerning the trust, thereby establishing
my bona fides. The woman vanished, her image replaced by a shifting
pattern of pastel colors, and, after several minutes, this in turn
was replaced by a contract form with a glowing blue patch at the
bottom to which I pressed the ball of my thumb. The woman
reappeared, much more solicitous now, and cautioned me to remain
where I was. She assured me that an armed force would be at the
house within the hour. As an afterthought she advised me to wipe the
blood from my face.
The
presence of the body–its meat reality–made me uncomfortable. I
picked up the letter opener and went down the stairs and groped my
way across the unlit room off the alcove and found a chair in a
corner from which I could see the door. Sitting alone in the
darkness amplified the torpor that had pervaded me, and though I
sensed certain unsettling dissonances surrounding what had just
taken place, I was not sufficiently alert to consider them as other
than aggravations. I had been sitting there for perhaps ten minutes
when the door opened and Phuong, laughing, stepped into the alcove
with Tan behind her, wearing a blue skirt and checkered blouse. She
kicked the door shut, pushed Tan against the wall, and began to kiss
her, running a hand up under her skirt. Then her head snapped
around, and although I didn’t believe she could see in the dark, she
stared directly at me.
Before I
could react, before I could be sure that Phuong had detected me, Tan
struck her beneath the jaw with the heel of her left hand, driving
her against the opposite wall, and followed this with a kick to the
stomach. Phuong rolled away and up into a crouch. She cried out my
father’s name: "William!" Whether in warning or–recognizing what had
happened–in grief, I cannot say. Then the two women began to fight.
It lasted no more than half a minute, but their speed and eerie
grace were incredible to see: like watching two long-fingered
witches dancing in a bright patch of weakened gravity and casting
violent spells. Dazed by Tan’s initial blows, Phoung went on the
defensive, but soon she recovered and started to hold her own. I
remembered the letter opener in my hand. The thing was poorly
balanced and Phuong’s quickness made the timing hard to judge, but
then she paused, preparing to launch an attack, and I flung the
opener, lodging it squarely between her shoulderblades. Not a mortal
wound–the blade was too dull to bite deep–but a distracting one. She
shrieked, tried to reach the opener, and, as she reeled to the side,
Tan came up behind her and broke her neck with a savage twist. She
let the body fall and walked toward me, a shadow in the darkened
room. It seemed impossible that she was the same woman I had known
on the beach at Vung Tau, and I felt a spark of fear.
"Are you
all right?" she asked, stopping a few feet away.
"All
right?" I laughed. "What’s going on here?"
She gave no
reply, and I said, "Apparently you decided against using Mei’s
herbs."
"If you had
done as I asked, if you’d stayed clear, it might not have been
necessary to kill her." She came another step forward. "Have you
called for security?"
I nodded.
"Did you learn to fight like that in Hue?"
"In China,"
she said.
"At a
private security company. Like Phuong."
"Yes."
"Then it
would follow that you’re not Vang’s niece."
"But I am,"
she said. "He used the last of his fortune to have me trained so I
could protect you. He was a bitter man . . . to have used his family
so."
"And I
suppose sleeping with me falls under the umbrella of
protection."
She kneeled
beside the chair, put a hand on my neck, and gazed at me
entreatingly. "I love you, Philip. I would do anything for you. How
can you doubt it?"
I was moved
by her sincerity, but I could not help but treat her coldly. It was
as if a valve had been twisted shut to block the flow of my
emotions. "That’s right," I said. "Vang told me that your kind were
conditioned to bond with their clients."
I watched
the words hit home, a wounded expression washing across her
features, then fading, like a ripple caused by a pebble dropped into
a still pond. "Is that so important?" she asked. "Does it alter the
fact that you fell in love with me?"
I ignored
this, yet I was tempted to tell her, No, it did not. "If you were
trained to protect me, why did Vang discourage our
relationship?"
She got to
her feet, her face unreadable, and went a few paces toward the
alcove; she appeared to be staring at Phuong’s body, lying crumpled
in the light. "There was a time when I think he wanted me for
himself. That may explain it."
"Did Phuong
really accost you?" I asked. "Or was that . . .
"I’ve never
lied to you. I’ve deceived you by not revealing everything I knew
about Vang," she said. "But I was bound to obey him in that. As you
said, I’ve been conditioned."
I had other
questions, but I could not frame one of them. The silence of the
house seemed to breed a faint humming, and I became oppressed by the
idea that Tan and I were living analogs of the two corpses, that the
wealth I was soon to receive as a consequence of our actions would
lead us to a pass wherein we would someday lie dead in separate
rooms of a silent house, while two creatures like ourselves but
younger would stand apart from one another in fretful isolation,
pondering their future. I wanted to dispossess myself of this
notion, to contrive a more potent reality, and I crossed the room to
Tan and turned her to face me. She refused to meet my eyes, but I
tipped up her chin and kissed her. A lover’s kiss. I touched her
breasts–a treasuring touch. But despite the sweet affirmation and
openness of the kiss, I think it also served a formal purpose, the
sealing of a bargain whose terms we did not fully
understand.
Six months
and a bit after my eighteenth birthday, I was sitting in a room in
the Sony offices in Saigon, a windowless space with black walls and
carpet and silver-framed photographs of scenes along the Perfume
River and in the South China Sea, when Vang flickered into being
against the far wall. I thought I must seem to him, as he seemed to
me, like a visitation, a figure from another time manifested in a
dream. He appeared no different than he had on the day he left the
circus–thin and gray-haired, dressed in careworn clothing–and his
attitude toward me was, as ever, distant. I told him what had
happened in Binh Khoi, and he said, "I presumed you would have more
trouble with William. Of course he thought he had leverage over
me–he thought he had Tan in his clutches. So he let his guard down.
He believed he had nothing to fear."
His logic
was overly simplistic, but rather than pursue this, I asked the
question foremost on my mind: why had he not told me that he was my
grandfather? I had uncovered quite a lot about my past in the
process of familiarizing myself with Vang’s affairs, but I wanted to
hear it all.
"Because
I’m not your grandfather," he said. "I was William’s
father-in-law, but . . ." He shot me an amused look. "I should have
thought you would have understood all this by now."
I saw no
humor in the situation. "Explain it to me."
"As you
wish." He paced away from me, stopped to inspect one of the framed
photographs. "William engineered the death of my wife, my daughter,
and my grandson in a plane crash. Once he had isolated me, he
challenged my mental competency, intending to take over my business
concerns. To thwart him, I faked my suicide. It was a very
convincing fake. I used a body I’d had cloned to supply me with
organs. I kept enough money to support Green Star and to pay for
Tan’s training. The rest you know."
"Not so," I
said. "You haven’t told me who I am.""Ah, yes."
He turned from the photograph and smiled pleasantly at me. "I
suppose that would interest you. Your mother’s name was Tuyet. Tuyet
Su Vanh. She was an actress in various pornographic media. The woman
you saw in your dream–that was she. We had a relationship for
several years, then we drifted apart. Not long before I lost my
family, she came to me and told me she was dying. One of the mutated
HIVs. She said she’d borne a child by me. A son. She begged me to
take care of you. I didn’t believe her, of course. But she had given
me pleasure, so I set up a trust for you. A small one."
"And then
you decided to use me."
"William
had undermined my authority to the extent that I could not confront
him directly. I needed an arrow to aim at his heart. I told your
mother that if she cooperated with me I’d adopt you, place my
fortune in the trust, and make you my heir. She gave permission to
have your memory wiped. I wanted you empty so I could fill you with
my purpose. After you were re-educated, she helped construct some
fragmentary memories that were implanted by means of a biochip.
Nonetheless, you were a difficult child to mold. I couldn’t be
certain that you would seek William out, and so, since I was old and
tired and likely not far from Heaven, I decided to feign an illness
and withdraw. This allowed me to arrange a confrontation without
risk to myself."
I should
have hated Vang, but after six months of running his businesses, of
viewing the world from a position of governance and control, I
understood him far too well to hate–though at that moment,
understanding the dispassionate requisites and protocols of such a
position seemed as harsh a form of judgment as the most bitter of
hatreds. "What happened to my mother?" I asked.
"I arranged
for her to receive terminal care in an Australian
hospital."
"And her
claim that I was your biological son. . . . did you investigate
it?"
"Why should
I? It didn’t matter. A man in my position could not acknowledge an
illegitimate child, and once I had made my decision to abdicate my
old life, it mattered even less. If it has any meaning for you,
there are medical records you can access."
"I think
I’d prefer it to remain a mystery," I told him.
"You’ve no
reason to be angry at me," he said. "I’ve made you wealthy. And what
did it cost? A few memories."
I shifted
in my chair, steepled my hands on my stomach. "Are you convinced
that my . . . that William had your family killed? He seemed to
think there had been a misunderstanding."
"That was a
charade! If you’re asking whether or not I had proof–of course I
didn’t. William knew how to disguise his hand."
"So
everything you did was based solely on the grounds of your
suspicions."
"No! It was
based on my knowledge of the man!" His tone softened. "What does it
matter? Only William and I knew the truth, and he is dead. If you
doubt me, if you pursue this further, you’ll never be able to
satisfy yourself."
"I suppose
you’re right," I said, getting to my feet.
"Are you
leaving already?" He wore an aggrieved expression. "I was hoping
you’d tell me about Tan . . . and Green Star. What has happened with
my little circus?"
"Tan is
well. As for Green Star, I gave it to Mei and Tranh."
I opened
the door, and Vang made a gesture of restraint. "Stay a while
longer, Philip. Please. You and Tan are the only people with whom I
have an emotional connection. It heartens me to spend time with
you."
Hearing him
describe our relationship in these terms gave me pause. I recalled
the conversation in which Tan had asserted that something central to
the idea of life died when one was uploaded into Heaven–Vang’s
uncharacteristic claim to an emotional debt caused me to think that
he might well be, as she’d described her parents, a colored shadow,
a cunningly contrived representation of the original. I hoped that
this was not the case; I hoped that he was alive in every
respect.
"I have to
go," I said. "Business, you understand. But I have some news that
may be of interest to you."
"Oh?" he
said eagerly. "Tell me."
"I’ve
invested heavily in Sony, and through negotiation I’ve arranged for
one of your old companies–Intertech of Hanoi–to be placed in charge
of overseeing the virtual environment. I would expect you’re soon
going to see some changes in your particular part of
Heaven."
He seemed
nonplussed, then a look of alarm dawned on his face. "What are you
going to do?"
"Me? Not a
thing." I smiled, and the act of smiling weakened my emotional
restraint–a business skill I had not yet perfected–and let anger
roughen my voice. "It’s much more agreeable to have your dirty work
handled by others, don’t you think?"
***
On
occasion, Tan and I manage to rekindle an intimacy that reminds us
of the days when we first were lovers, but these occasions never
last for long, and our relationship is plagued by the lapses into
neutrality or–worse–indifference that tend to plague any two people
who have spent ten years in each other’s company. In our case these
lapses are often accompanied by bouts of self-destructive behavior.
It seems we’re punishing ourselves for having experienced what we
consider an undeserved happiness. Even our most honest infidelities
are inclined to be of the degrading sort. I understand this. The
beach at Vung Tau, once the foundation of our union, has been
replaced by a night on Yen Phu Street in Binh Khoi, and no edifice
built upon such imperfect stone could be other than cracked and
deficient. Nonetheless, we both realize that whatever our portion of
contentment in this world, we are fated to seek it
together.
From time
to time, I receive a communication from Vang. He does not look well,
and his tone is always desperate, cajoling. I tell myself that I
should relent and restore him to the afterlife for which he
contracted; but I am not highly motivated in that regard. If there
truly is something that dies when one ascends to Heaven, I fear it
has already died in me, and I blame Vang for this.
Seven years
after my talk with Vang, Tan and I attended a performance of the
circus in the village of Loc Noi. There was a new James Bond
Cochise, Kai and Kim had become pretty teenagers, both Tranh and Mei
were thinner, but otherwise things were much the same. We sat in the
main tent after the show and reminisced. The troupe–Mei in
particular–were unnerved by my bodyguards, but all in all, it was a
pleasant reunion.
After a
while I excused myself and went to see the major. He was huddled in
his tent, visible by the weird flickerings in his eyes . . . though
as my vision adapted to the dark, I was able make out the cowled
shape of his head against the canvas backdrop. Tranh had told me he
did not expect the major to live much longer, and now that I was
close to him, I found that his infirmity was palpable, I could hear
it in his labored breath. I asked if he knew who I was, and he
replied without inflection, as he had so many years before,
"Philip." I’d hoped that he would be more forthcoming, because I
still felt akin to him, related through the cryptic character of our
separate histories, and I thought that he might once have sensed
that kinship, that he’d had some diffuse knowledge of the choices I
confronted, and had designed the story of Firebase Ruby for my
benefit, shaping it as a cautionary tale–one I’d failed to heed. But
perhaps I’d read too much into what was sheer coincidence. I touched
his hand, and his breath caught, then shuddered forth, heavy as a
sob. All that remained for him were a few stories, a few hours in
the light. I tried to think of something I could do to ease his last
days, but I knew death was the only mercy that could mend
him.
Mei invited
Tan and me to spend the night in the trailer–for old times’ sake,
she said–and we were of no mind to refuse. We both yearned for those
old times, despite neither of us believing that we could recapture
them. Watching Tan prepare for bed, it seemed to me that she had
grown too vivid for the drab surroundings, her beauty become too
cultivated and too lush. But when she slipped in beside me, when we
began to make love on that creaky bunk, the years fell away and she
felt like a girl in my arms, tremulous and new to such customs, and
I was newly awakened to her charms. She drifted off to sleep
afterward with her head on my chest, and as I lay there trying to
quiet my breath so not to wake her, it came to me that future and
past were joined in the darkness that enclosed us, two black rivers
flowing together, and I understood that while the circus would go
its own way in the morning and we would go ours, those rivers, too,
were forever joined–we shared a confluence and a wandering course,
and a moment proof against the world’s denial, and we would always
be a troupe, Kim and Kai, Mei and Tranh, Tan and I, and the major .
. . that living ghost who, like myself, was the figment of a tragic
past he never knew, or–if, indeed, he knew it–with which he could
never come to terms. It was a bond that could not save us, from
either our enemies or ourselves, but it held out a hope of simple
glory, a promise truer than Heaven. Illusory or not, all our wars
would continue until their cause was long-forgotten under the banner
of Radiant Green Star.